Dude, please don't lie now. Maybe you made an honest mistake earlier but you wrote this:
Clearly you were talking about IAF's problem with price
You just picked up one line from the whole para and so it looked like that for you. I would requote myself here.
RFP has been issued in March 2018 and its almost coming to be a year now. IAF for all this near 12 month is stuck up with the 6 month extension. What good they would achieve with it? If they can't do anything in 12 month, what more they think to achieve in 6 month? Moreover its a single vendor contract, so instead of sticking to a point, they should have worked on it. If they would have ordered the fighter by now, the price would not have been a problem for them.
Here I am talking of price validity. In my second post I just expanded the view.
This is simply your assumption. It is quite possible that evaluating HAL's response would actually take 18 months, which is why DPP asks for 18 month evaluation time. Regardless, IAF didn't make it a sticking point. IAF only asked responses for other two points.
Also, how do you know that the delivery schedule problem is due to lower demand and not HAL's general incompetence? Because as I see it, HAL has a unique ability to delay production even in projects of huge demands. MKI and Dhruv manufacturing are prime examples. 1300 crores were approved years ago to expand Tejas manufacturing capacity, but as per HAL's MD interview few days back, they will still continue producing 8 Tejas per annum till 2022.
Btw, my point in my original post was that IAF gets very wrong reputation of being anti indigenization because of stupid articles of some defence bloggers, where as much bigger crimes by DRDO and PSUs go un-noticed. I am not here to bash HAL.
This is not my assumption. As I said earlier, a price validity period is needed to brush off the various knick knacks of a proposal. These are generally technical in nature. In case of a multi vendor approach, it is a deciding factor as it do take time for technical evaluation of products and it is a security that during all this evaluation period, the quoted price doesn't change at time of order.
But in case of Tejas, it was a single vendor contract. IAF had to evaluate just one system and if they had not been able to do it in 1 year, what they could achieve in further 6 months. IAF is simply hanging to one laid down procedure and is sticking to the point instead of coming to terms and change it. IAF knew about the price validity on March 2018 itself and now when its nearing March 2019, they are moving to MOD.
I mean in one year all IAF had came up with is,
1- Deferred range aspect, which as per HAL has been resolved and fresh proposal submitted.
2- Non compliance of delivery schedule. A genuine concern, but which could be worked out in one year time frame.
3- Price validity period. Again, if IAF could not have come to order in one year period, what more would change in another 6 month that they would order?
Out of the three, the only technical issue IAF has pointed is sorted out. 6 month extension is not going to solve the delivery schedule any way.