Eastern Eye (UK)

New Delhi to offer funding in drive to become electronic­s production hub

-

INDIA has approved a $10 billion (£7.5bn) incentive plan to attract semiconduc­tor and display manufactur­ers, its technology minister said last Wednesday (15), as part of a deepening push to establish the country as a global electronic­s production hub.

Under the plan, India’s government will extend fiscal support of up to 50 per cent of a project’s cost to eligible display and semiconduc­tor fabricator­s, the government said in a statement.

Israel’s Tower Semiconduc­tor,

Taiwan’s Foxconn and a consortium from Singapore have shown interest in setting up chip factories in India, while the Vedanta Group was keen to set up a display plant, a government source told reporters.

“The programme will usher in a new era in electronic­s manufactur­ing by providing a globally competitiv­e incentive package to companies in semiconduc­tors and display manufactur­ing as well as design,” the government statement said.

The drive comes as some companies look to diversify their manufactur­ing bases beyond China due to the ongoing trade war between Washington and Beijing. It is also a sign that India is trying to move up the electronic­s value chain.

India’s plan to incentivis­e semiconduc­tor manufactur­ing also comes at a time when automakers and tech companies around the world are grappling with a global chip shortage.

New Delhi also approved an incentive plan to support 100 local firms working on integrated circuit and chipset designs.

Technology minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said the plan would help develop “the complete semiconduc­tor ecosystem – from the design of semiconduc­tor chips to their fabricatio­n, packing and testing in the country”.

The government said it expected the plan to create about 35,000 high-quality positions, 100,000 indirect jobs and attract investment worth `1.67 trillion (£6.6bn).

Prime minister Narendra Modi’s government has offered about $30bn (£22.6bn) in incentives to woo some of the world’s largest electronic­s manufactur­ers to set up shop in India and give the domestic industry a fillip.

The push has already helped make India the world’s secondbigg­est smartphone maker behind China. It has also helped India win investment commitment­s from Foxconn, Wistron and Pegatron – three of Apple’s top contract manufactur­ers.

“The government’s plan will help bring advanced technology, more employment and bigger investment­s into India,” said A Gururaj, managing director of Indian contract manufactur­er Optiemus Electronic­s. “It will also help cut expensive tech imports.”

Tata Group, one of India’s biggest conglomera­tes, is venturing into the semiconduc­tor business. It is in talks with three states to invest up to $300 million to set up a chip assembly and test unit, it was reported last month.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom