The government on
Wednesday approved a Rs 7,350-crore scheme to boost production of laptops,
tablets, all-in-one PCs and servers in the country, as it sought to woo global
and domestic players to take advantage of India's manufacturing prowess.
Production worth Rs 3.26 lakh crore and exports of Rs
2.45 lakh crore are estimated over the next four years under the new scheme,
which is expected to create 1.80 lakh jobs.
Briefing
reporters after a meeting of the Cabinet, Communications and IT Minister Ravi
Shankar Prasad said the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme has been
approved for IT hardware products that would cover laptops, tablets, all-in-one
PCs and servers.
The Rs 7,350-crore scheme aims to promote India as a
global hub for hardware manufacturing.
The
PLI push for hi-tech IT hardware gadgets comes close on the heels of the
Cabinet last week clearing a Rs 12,195 crore scheme for telecom equipment
manufacturing.
An
incentive scheme for mobile phone manufacturing was announced last year and has
since garnered strong response from players despite the challenging times of
the pandemic.
The
latest IT hardware scheme offers incentives between 4-1 per cent on net
incremental sales (over base year 2019-20) of goods manufactured in India and
covered under the target segment, to eligible companies, for a period of four
years, an official statement said.
The scheme will benefit
five major global players and 10 domestic "champions" in the field of
IT hardware manufacturing, a segment where self-reliance is important for the
country given the "huge import reliance" for these items at present,
it added.
The PLI scheme is expected
to enhance the development of electronics ecosystem in India, at a time when
globally manufacturing is undergoing a shift and companies across the world are
looking to diversify their manufacturing locations to mitigate the risk
involved in depending on a single market.
"India will be well
positioned as a global hub for Electronics System Design and Manufacturing
(ESDM) on account of integration with global value chains, thereby becoming a
destination for IT hardware exports," the statement said.
The incentives under the
scheme are payable by government only after investment has been done,
employment has been generated, production and sales targets have been met.
The scheme will usher
additional investment in electronics manufacturing to the tune of Rs 2,700
crore.
"The direct and
indirect revenues generated from production under this scheme are expected to
be Rs 15,760 crore over next four years.
"Domestic value
addition for IT hardware is expected to rise to 20 - 25 per cent by 2025 from
the current 5-10 per cent due to the impetus provided by the scheme," it
said.
Increase in both domestic
manufacturing and domestic value addition will help significantly reduce the
large foreign exchange outgo that India will have to otherwise bear, it added.
At present, the laptop and
tablet demand in India is largely met through imports valued at Rs 29,470 crore
and at Rs 2,870 crore, respectively.
The market for IT hardware
is dominated by 6-7 companies globally which control about 70 per cent of the
world's market share.
These companies are able to
exploit large economies of scale to compete in global markets.
"It is imperative that
these companies expand their operations in India and make it a major
destination for manufacturing of IT hardware," the release pointed out.
The PLI scheme is also
expected to contribute significantly to achieving the $1 trillion digital
economy and $5 trillion GDP target by 2025.
As many as 16 companies
were approved under the first round of the PLI scheme for large scale
manufacturing of mobile phones and specified electronic components.
"In the last 5 months
of scheme operation and despite challenging times, the applicant companies,
including top global mobile phone companies, have produced goods worth Rs
35,000 crore and invested Rs 1,300 crore under the scheme.
"Additional employment
generation during this period stands at around 22,000 jobs," the release
added.
Another scheme for
promoting manufacturing of electronics components has also received 22
applications involving investment of about Rs 13,500 crore in the areas of
active, passive and electromechanical components, displays and mechanics for
mobile phones.
Work and study from home
during the pandemic has put the PC market in India on a strong growth
trajectory.
As per research firm IDC,
PC shipments in India grew 27 per cent to 2.9 million units in the December
2020 quarter from 2.3 million units in the year-ago period.
During the October-December
2020 quarter, the notebook segment grew 62.1 per cent year-on-year to
contribute more than three-fourths of the total shipments of 2.9 million units.
On a full year basis, the
PC shipments -- comprising desktops, notebooks, and workstations -- stood at
10.27 million units.
Dell Technologies occupied
the top position with 27.5 per cent market share, followed by HP Inc (26.7 per
cent), Lenovo (18.4 per cent), Acer Group (8.5 per cent) and Asus (6.4 per
cent).
In August last year, HP had
announced commencement of manufacturing operations at contract electronics
manufacturer Flex Ltd's facility at Sriperumbudur near Chennai, Tamil Nadu.
HP, which already has its
own manufacturing plant in Pantnagar district of Uttarakhand since 2006, had
said the expansion is a part of its long-term commitment to the Indian market.
Earlier this year, Lenovo
had also talked about its plans of increasing laptop manufacturing facility by
about 10 times at its Puducherry facility, and starting tablets manufacturing
in India.
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