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Make in India giving way to assembled in India

Windjammer

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Make in India giving way to assembled in India, govt study shows
There is a need to promote domestic manufacturing in India to reduce import dependence. A company setting up manufacturing facility in a country might only lead to the final assembly of a product while bulk of the inputs, which have a big share in the overall cost of the equipment, might still be imported

Updated: Oct 16, 2018 09:30 IST
Vineet Sachdev
  • Hindustan Times, New Delhi
India imported $6.3 billion worth of mobile phones from China in 2014, the year Narendra Modi became the country’s prime minister. This number has declined continuously and reached $ 3.3 billion in 2017 according to a study conducted by the ministry of commerce and industry.

This would suggest that the ambitious Make in India programme of this government is working. But another set of statistics indicates otherwise. India’s import of parts of mobile phones as well as telecom equipment from China increased from $1.3 billion in 2014 to $9.4 billion in 2017.

The total import of mobile phones and telecom parts increased from $7.6 billion to $12.7 billion during this period.

Dynamics_Indo-China_trade_gfx.jpg


The study explains what has been happening. “Through the assembly of final telecom products in India, the Chinese firms have started assembly in India but as yet import substantially from home country to support (the) assembly line”, the study says. These findings capture the complex challenge of promoting domestic manufacturing to reduce import dependence in skill-intensive products in a country like India.

A company setting up manufacturing facility in a country might only lead to the final assembly of a product while bulk of the inputs, which have a big share in the overall cost of the equipment, might still be imported.

These findings also raise questions about the claims and setting up of targets vis-à-vis mobile phone manufacturing by the current government in India.

In April 2018, the Indian Cellular Association informed the telecom and IT ministry that India had become the second largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world. In late 2014, the government set the target of 500 million mobile phones to me made in India by 2019. This has now been revised to 1 billion units by 2025 under a newly released draft proposal on National policy on Electronics by ministry of Information and Technology

If fulfillment of such targets comes in the form of just the final assembly of imported components being done in India, it’ll have limited gains for both stimulating domestic economic activity and bringing down the trade deficit. The challenge is real when seen in the context of India’s rising non-oil trade deficit with both the rest of the world and China.

Dynamics_Indo-China_trade_gfx2.jpg


The increase in mobile phone manufacturing within the country is a result of the Phased Manufacturing Programme, which mandated localization of manufacturing activity.

Such a policy however cannot ensure an increase in value addition in manufacturing activity within the country, said Biswajit Dhar, professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University.



What needs to be done is to develop a complementary set of policies which incentivise foreign firms to increase the value added component when they open factories in the country, he added.
 
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First step to manufacturing is assembling. Once assembling is done in India, next step will be manufacturing parts.
The first Maruti Suzuki car made in India had nothing Indian except the foot mats. Totay India is manufacturing 6 million cars with most parts built in India.
 
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#FakeNews Pakistan's economy is bad!
Unemployed Bharti munshis are busy commenting on everything from Pakistan going to IMF to Dam funds and utility tariffs in Pakistan but i guess they are content as long as they have a mobile regardless it's made in China.

170410.jpg
 
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Who in the right mind thinks that entire mobile phone can be made in India suddenly? The best way to make things in India is to first assemble and then indigenise slowly. As of now, 15-20% of mobile phones are indigenous including things like earphones, charger, speakers, battery etc. Also, the number of smartphone sales in India have gone up without increasing import bill much due to this.

Even China imports many items like processor, motherboard, screens etc. Do you think China makes Snapdragon processor or Mediatek processor?
 
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Who in the right mind thinks that entire mobile phone can be made in India suddenly? The best way to make things in India is to first assemble and then indigenise slowly. As of now, 15-20% of mobile phones are indigenous including things like earphones, charger, speakers, battery etc. Also, the number of smartphone sales in India have gone up without increasing import bill much due to this.

Even China imports many items like processor, motherboard, screens etc. Do you think China makes Snapdragon processor or Mediatek processor?

WRONG.

At this very point of time. China can produce all components in a smartphone.

India being the largest smart phone market arent doing anything :omghaha:
 
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WRONG.

At this very point of time. China can produce all components in a smartphone.

India being the largest smart phone market arent doing anything :omghaha:
China does not produce chipset of good enough quality. Producing low quality chipset does not count. Also, RAM and flash memory also have to be imported. These are the major cost factors in a phone.

India is producing just 15-20% of phone parts as it has only started this since 2015-16. India will catch up soon
 
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China does not produce chipset of good enough quality. Producing low quality chipset does not count. Also, RAM and flash memory also have to be imported. These are the major cost factors in a phone.

India is producing just 15-20% of phone parts as it has only started this since 2015-16. India will catch up soon

Stop writing crap. As of now China can make everything.

How do you define a low quality chipset. Prove it.
 
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You know I don't want to be that guy, but over here in Pakistan....

we don't have a lot of cash bruh
 
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People are really insane... till 2014, only 3 or 4 factories were ASSEMBLING mobile phones in India... Today, the count is 30+...
2019, very critical year for India...

Chinese industry has not reached to today's calibre in a year or two...

Beggars calling someone poor is really laughable...

Stop writing crap. As of now China can make everything.

How do you define a low quality chipset. Prove it.

China has everything to sell... quality depends on the size of your pocket...
 
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In defense of India, this is how electronics manufacturing has been for the last 25 years or so.
 
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First it was

Made in India

when that failed it was

Make in India

when that too failed it is now

Assembled in India

when this fails it would be

Packed in India.:D
 
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YOu are so wrong @Windjammer Assembly = Made in India for indians

Make in India giving way to assembled in India, govt study shows
There is a need to promote domestic manufacturing in India to reduce import dependence. A company setting up manufacturing facility in a country might only lead to the final assembly of a product while bulk of the inputs, which have a big share in the overall cost of the equipment, might still be imported

Updated: Oct 16, 2018 09:30 IST
Vineet Sachdev
  • Hindustan Times, New Delhi
India imported $6.3 billion worth of mobile phones from China in 2014, the year Narendra Modi became the country’s prime minister. This number has declined continuously and reached $ 3.3 billion in 2017 according to a study conducted by the ministry of commerce and industry.

This would suggest that the ambitious Make in India programme of this government is working. But another set of statistics indicates otherwise. India’s import of parts of mobile phones as well as telecom equipment from China increased from $1.3 billion in 2014 to $9.4 billion in 2017.

The total import of mobile phones and telecom parts increased from $7.6 billion to $12.7 billion during this period.

Dynamics_Indo-China_trade_gfx.jpg


The study explains what has been happening. “Through the assembly of final telecom products in India, the Chinese firms have started assembly in India but as yet import substantially from home country to support (the) assembly line”, the study says. These findings capture the complex challenge of promoting domestic manufacturing to reduce import dependence in skill-intensive products in a country like India.

A company setting up manufacturing facility in a country might only lead to the final assembly of a product while bulk of the inputs, which have a big share in the overall cost of the equipment, might still be imported.

These findings also raise questions about the claims and setting up of targets vis-à-vis mobile phone manufacturing by the current government in India.

In April 2018, the Indian Cellular Association informed the telecom and IT ministry that India had become the second largest mobile phone manufacturer in the world. In late 2014, the government set the target of 500 million mobile phones to me made in India by 2019. This has now been revised to 1 billion units by 2025 under a newly released draft proposal on National policy on Electronics by ministry of Information and Technology

If fulfillment of such targets comes in the form of just the final assembly of imported components being done in India, it’ll have limited gains for both stimulating domestic economic activity and bringing down the trade deficit. The challenge is real when seen in the context of India’s rising non-oil trade deficit with both the rest of the world and China.

Dynamics_Indo-China_trade_gfx2.jpg


The increase in mobile phone manufacturing within the country is a result of the Phased Manufacturing Programme, which mandated localization of manufacturing activity.

Such a policy however cannot ensure an increase in value addition in manufacturing activity within the country, said Biswajit Dhar, professor of economics at Jawaharlal Nehru University.



What needs to be done is to develop a complementary set of policies which incentivise foreign firms to increase the value added component when they open factories in the country, he added.
 
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This is all semantics.

The youth we are birthing like rabbits and churning out of largely ordinary colleges need jobs.

Not everyone wants to sell tea and make pakodas.

Cheers, Doc
 
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A company setting up manufacturing facility in a country might only lead to the final assembly of a product while bulk of the inputs, which have a big share in the overall cost of the equipment, might still be imported

:lol: look who is belittling Indian manufacturing- someone from a country that cannot produce crude steel.- the very basic of industrialization...

The difference couldn't be more stark... Made in India VS Made in Pakistan

We have a Phased Manufacturing program to set up a local manufacturing ecosystem.

Notification_PMP_Cellular Mobile Handsets_28.04.2017_Page_2.jpg


The second phase, localising PCB Assembly is already done.

https://www.bgr.in/news/make-in-ind...artphone-manufacturing-units-first-pcb-plant/

https://m.economictimes.com/industr...a-unit-this-year/amp_articleshow/64266157.cms

https://m.economictimes.com/tech/ha...in-india-a-boost/amp_articleshow/63552812.cms

As for the rest of second/ third phase...

The Chinese component maker, one of the 50 such to be invited by Xiaomi to India in April this year, will locally produce camera modules, touch screen panels, TFT (thin film transistors), flexible printed circuits and fingerprint modules exclusively for Xiaomi, starting January 2019, company Chief Executive Flame Chen told reporters.

https://m.economictimes.com/tech/ha...omponents-for-xiaomi/articleshow/65292375.cms

Another one...

NEW DELHI: Syska Group has formed a joint venture with Taiwanese component manufactur Suyin Optronics and Singapore’s Biometronic to start India’s first camera module factory at an investmen t of Rs 200 crore to be implemented in a phased manner.

https://m.economictimes.com/industr...amera-module-factory/articleshow/65816494.cms

Also...

South Korea’s LG Electronics Inc. gained the go-ahead from the Korean authority to design and build India’s first liquid crystal display (LCD) manufacturing facility in Gen-8 substrate sheets (2250x2500mm). Even fab-advanced Taiwanese and Japanese companies have not attempted commissioning in building high-precision display facilities outside their country for fear of a technology leak.

According to industry sources on Monday, LG Electronics’ Materials and Production engineering Research Institute (PRI) received the green light from Korea’s Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy on its business plan of delivering a LCD manufacturing facility on a turnkey basis in Nagpur, central India, for Twinstar Display of India’s Vedanta Group.


https://m.pulsenews.co.kr/view.php?year=2017&no=429795

Basically we have gone from importing to PCB assembly to component manufacture, whereas the land of pure is stuck with importing & a BoP crisis. :lol:

Unemployed Bharti munshis are busy commenting on everything from Pakistan going to IMF

Pakistanis going to IMF must be fake news as well !!!

We must ask the Bharati chief economist at IMF, Mrs. Gita Gopinath about it.
:rofl: :rofl: :rofl:
 
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