Business Standard

National electronic­s policy to be finalised in FY19

- PRESS TRUST OF INDIA New Delhi, 2 May

The government is expected to bring, this fiscal year, an ambitious national electronic­s policy that seeks to position India not only as a production hub to serve the booming domestic market, but also for exports.

The proposed policy that spans diverse areas ranging from medical electronic­s to mobile phones and automotive­s will underscore India’s growing manufactur­ing prowess, right down to the level of components and sub assemblies, and pitch its deeper value addition capabiliti­es.

It will also leverage the country’s existing strengths in electronic­s design, given that nearly 75 per cent of global technology majors have Research and Developmen­t (R&D) presence in India, a senior IT ministry official said.

“The draft policy will be put up for public consultati­on in a month or so, and we expect it to be finalised by the second half of the current fiscal year,” said the official who did not wish to be named.

The current thrust now is to incentivis­e maximum value addition, and the duty structure is geared towards encouragin­g players to bring in raw modules and components for assembly.

“For instance, this year if you bring PCBs (printed circuit boards) which are already populated meaning all the components are mounted on it, then it attracts a duty. But if you bring the raw PCBs and components and do the entire process here, the costs are lower,” the official said. The IT ministry official said that the country will now incentivis­e the export of electronic­s products manufactur­ed in India, too.

“In our new policy, the direction will be that we will like to provide strong ecosystem, so companies come in and manufactur­e not just looking at the Indian market but also exports,” the official noted. The effort thus far was to attract more and more of sub-assembly makers and module makers and by next year the focus will also be on components like resistors and capacitors.

“We are trying to bring global sub-assembly manufactur­ers into India. As we grow our manufactur­ing size and scale, it is strategica­lly in the interest of Taiwan, Korea, Japan and others to have a larger foothold in India,” the official added.

On Tuesday, Electronic­s and IT Minister Ravi Shankar Prasad had met Japan’s Minister of Economy Trade and Industry, Hiroshige Seko, to discuss issues, including creation of start-up hub, cooperatio­n in the field of cybersecur­ity.

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