India plans to boost financial incentives for manufacturers that make tablets and laptops in the country as part of its bid to challenge China as a production base.
India plans to boost the financial incentives for manufacturers that make tablets and laptops in the country, wooing companies such as Apple and Dell Technologies as part of its bid to challenge China as a production base.
The federal technology ministry has floated the revamped programme to electronics industry executives for consultation, including payments that could exceed a half a billion dollars per company, people familiar with the matter said. India wants to boost production of tablets and laptops to cut imports and make the country an export hub in the longer term.
The effort is aimed at companies such as Apple, Dell, HP and Asustek Computer to widen or begin local production, the people said. In particular, the country wants to persuade Apple, which already assembles iPhones in India via its Taiwanese suppliers, to make iPads locally.
The plan offers as much as 45 billion rupees (US$549 million) per manufacturer, according to a government document seen by Bloomberg News. To qualify, foreign companies would need to invest 7 billion rupees (US$85.6 million) in India over five years on top of outlays they’ve made through March 2021. The incentives would depend on local procurement of components and could go as high as the equivalent of about 6 per cent of the sales of finished products.
The plan could change after consultation with the industry. Last year, India launched a programme worth 73.5 billion rupees (US$900 million) to ramp up local manufacturing and build exports of IT products such as laptops, tablets and personal computers, but the effort failed to attract companies due to a perceived small size of the incentives.
The Narendra Modi administration has been ramping up efforts to attract global electronics names through policy initiatives, as China’s allure wanes because of geopolitical tensions and its disruptive zero-Covid policy. There are signs of momentum: Apple began making its new iPhone 14 in India sooner than anticipated, after a surprisingly smooth production roll-out that slashed the lag between Chinese and Indian output from months to mere weeks.
Apple has yet to expand iPad production to India though. Besides the incentives, the US company could be attracted by an Indian computer and tablet market that grew at a 12 per cent rate last quarter, according to research firm Canalys, even as global electronics demand slowed.
Companies like Dell and HP, which already make laptops in India on a small scale and have excess capacity, could find it unattractive to invest more to ramp up production. Chinese manufacturers such as Lenovo Group, meanwhile, could find it difficult to win the incentives amid New Delhi’s frosty relationship with Beijing since a Himalayan border clash between the countries in 2020.