India's electronic manufacturing and export to see robust growth with new components policy: Report

ANI April 10, 2025 220 views

India is undergoing a remarkable transformation in its electronics manufacturing landscape, driven by strategic government policies and ambitious targets. The new Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme is set to dramatically increase domestic value addition from 15% to 50% in the coming years. Mobile phone manufacturing has been a key driver, with exports surging 77 times over the past decade and contributing 44% of total electronic production. The government's vision includes achieving $500 billion in electronics exports by 2030, positioning India as a global manufacturing powerhouse.

"We expect value addition to increase to 40/50 per cent from the current 15/16 per cent" - Axis Capital Report
New Delhi, April 10: With the new electronic components manufacturing policy "in place", India's electronic manufacturing will see a value addition of 40 to 50 per cent from the current 15-16 per cent, said a report by Axis Capital."We expect value addition to increase to 40/ 50 per cent from the current 15/ 16 per cent, with a components policy now in place". said the report

Key Points

1

Government's strategic policies boosting electronics manufacturing ecosystem

2

Mobile phone sector leads significant production growth

3

India emerging as global manufacturing and export hub

4

Targeted $500 billion exports by fiscal year 2030

The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY), on April 8, notified the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme, marking a significant step towards strengthening India's position as a global hub for electronics manufacturing.

According to the Axis report, India is the second-largest mobile phone producer in the world, with 99 per cent of mobile phones sold in the country being locally made. India's mobile phone exports surged by 77 times over FY14-24.

The report highlighted that India is rapidly emerging as a preferred global manufacturing and export hub, driven by a combination of strategic government policies like Production Linked Incentive (PLI), Phased Manufacturing Program (PMP), and Scheme for Promotion of Manufacturing of Electronic Components and Semiconductors (SPECS), a skilled workforce, and infrastructure that is outpacing competitors.

India has always relied significantly on imports, particularly in electronics, where imports exceeded production until the financial year (FY16).

With the 'Make in India' initiative, the country is now expanding its electronics industry, attracting significant investments and boosting local output.

As a result, production was around 24 per cent higher than imports in FY24. India's electronics exports expanded at a CAGR of around 26 per cent over FY16-25.

Electronics production witnessed a CAGR of 20 per cent over FY15-24, led by mobile phone manufacturing. Mobile manufacturing contributed 44 per cent of total electronic production and witnessed a CAGR of 41 per cent over the same period, significantly outpacing the total electronicsgrowth.

The government has set a target to achieve USD 500 billion in exports by FY30, where the focus will be on component manufacturing, which is expected to contribute 30 per cent of the overall production from 9 per cent in FY24.

Reader Comments

R
Rahul K.
This is fantastic news! India's electronics manufacturing sector is finally getting the push it deserves. The 77x growth in mobile exports is mind-blowing! 🇮🇳💪
P
Priya M.
While the growth numbers look impressive, I hope the government ensures fair wages and working conditions for factory workers. Growth shouldn't come at the cost of labor rights.
A
Arjun S.
The component manufacturing push is crucial. We've been assembling phones but importing most parts. This policy change could make us truly self-reliant in electronics.
S
Sunita R.
As someone working in this industry, I can confirm the transformation is real. Our factory has tripled production capacity in just 2 years thanks to these policies. More jobs being created too!
V
Vikram J.
The $500B export target seems ambitious but achievable if we maintain this momentum. Hope we can also focus on R&D and not just manufacturing. Need more Indian tech patents!
N
Neha P.
Finally some good news about manufacturing! My only concern is whether we have enough skilled technicians for component manufacturing. Maybe need more vocational training programs?

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Your email won't be published

Tags:
You May Like!