Business Standard

Top gear makers may warm up to Centre’s telecom PLI scheme

- SURAJEET DAS GUPTA

Some leading telecom equipment manufactur­ers might be interested in the government’s production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, announced on Wednesday.

They include Nokia and Ericsson, Taiwanese electronic­s manufactur­ing service companies Flex (earlier named Flextronic­s) and Foxconn, Jabil Inc, Cisco, Ciena, and Samsung, which is a telecom vendor to Reliance Jio.

Under the PLI scheme, companies will enjoy a 4-6 per cent incentive annually across five years on their production value in India, provided they make incrementa­l investment­s.

The government has provided for an outlay of ~12,195 crore over five years for the scheme and will offer it to five companies.

Nokia India, which has a manufactur­ing plant near Chennai, already earns 50 per cent of its revenues from exports.

The company recently announced that it was exporting 5G radios.

Sources said Nokia is expecting to use about 70-80 per cent of its capacity in the existing plant and will be looking for further expansion. “We hope these incentives will give the right impetus to the telecom manufactur­ing eco-system in the country,” said a Nokia spokespers­on.

Jabil manufactur­es 5G-enabled radios for Ericsson but a spokespers­on for the latter declined to respond beyond saying ‘we welcome the PLI scheme, however it is premature to comment on specific plans’.

In an earlier interview with Business Standard, Ericsson India MD Nitin Bansal had said that while the company would like to export more from India and could easily scale up, they wanted to get credit for the investment­s they have already made in capacity which is still surplus. Experts say the PLI policy has, to an extent, taken cognizance of this issue.

Neither Flex nor Jabil, Foxconn, Cisco, Ciena or Samsung agreed to comment when contacted.

To be eligible for the scheme, the minimum threshold investment has to be ~100 crore. If a company invests ~20 crore in a year, it will receive a PLI on the production value up to ~400 crore.

Once qualified, companies will be incentivis­ed up to 20 times the minimum incentive threshold. This will enable them to utilise their unused capacity —a demand which players had put to the government. The government expects the scheme to lead to an incrementa­l production of ~2.4 trillion, with exports rising to around ~2 lakh and fresh investment­s of ~5,000 crore. This expectatio­n is rather high. Currently, according to the government, the telecom sector consumes over $10 billion of equipment, of which only $3 billion is made in India.

India’s exports of telecom equipment were around ~30,828 crore in 2019-20 (till December). In contrast the import bill was to the tune of ~80,901 crore during the same period. Also, many experts say that the cost disability between India and its competitor­s, even after allowing for the incentive, is very high and does not make it costcompet­itive. For instance, India’s cost disability with Vietnam ranges from 8-11 per cent while that with China ranges between 17-20 per cent, according to the government’s own internal studies.

But several equipment manufactur­ers continued to be enthusiast­ic about the PLI scheme. “This is the first important step. We are talking with the government to reduce this disability with other measures too,” said a senior telecom executive of a global gear maker.

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