India's Manufacturing Ambition Hinges on Design Prowess
India's fervent push to establish itself as a global manufacturing hub is a welcome stride for economic expansion and job creation. However, experts caution that manufacturing divorced from genuine design and development capabilities, a common scenario today, will prevent India from achieving true global powerhouse status.
Lessons from Pharma and Transport
The pharmaceutical sector serves as a stark example. India is the world's largest producer of generic drugs, yet it remains heavily dependent on imported active pharmaceutical ingredients and contributes minimally to original research and development. This limits its role in the global value chain, creating capacity but not influence.
The Vande Bharat Express, often hailed as a symbol of India's design ingenuity, was a significant first step, but not the world-class breakthrough it is portrayed to be. Despite proliferating services, it has seen minimal technological upgrades. Similarly, while substantial investment has poured into the metro sector's rolling stock and signalling, India lacks proprietary products, with pride often misplaced in mere assembly exports.
The Semiconductor Opportunity
The drive towards becoming self-reliant, or 'Atmanirbhar Bharat,' emphasizes acquiring, adapting, and even reverse-engineering technologies. However, the ultimate goal must be to infuse these with indigenous creativity and imagination to achieve true ownership. This principle is underscored by discussions with major multinational semiconductor equipment suppliers.
These companies perform significant IT and design work in India, yet lack a domestic market. With India's renewed focus on semiconductor manufacturing, they see opportunity but stress the critical need for investment in local R&D, indigenous capabilities, and innovation for product development. Semiconductor chips are foundational to modern technologies, from Industry 4.0 and AI to electric mobility and 5G.
Government Support and Market Growth
India's large population, expanding digital services, growing electronics market, shift to EVs, and 5G rollout are driving demand for advanced chips. The pandemic highlighted supply chain vulnerabilities, accelerating the push for localized production. The transport and mobility sectors, in particular, are emerging as significant consumers of specialized chip solutions.
To foster this shift, the government has introduced policy frameworks. The India Semiconductor Mission allocates ₹76,000 crore, offering up to 50 per cent financial support for capital expenditure in semiconductor manufacturing. Additional schemes promote manufacturing of electronic components and semiconductors, including photovoltaic polysilicon, wafers, solar cells, and e-waste recycling, alongside incentives for domestic mobile phone and component manufacturing.
The Path to Genuine Leadership
India's semiconductor market, currently valued at approximately $25 billion, is projected to grow at nearly 17 per cent annually. While entrepreneurs and investors see immense opportunity, the uncomfortable truth remains: rapid market and manufacturing growth alone will not propel India to global leadership like China or Taiwan.
India possesses significant semiconductor design talent, with a substantial portion of global chip design engineers based here, and many multinational design centers operating within the country. However, this talent largely serves foreign entities; India owns little indigenous chip design intellectual property and has a nascent fabless ecosystem. For India to become a genuine semiconductor power, manufacturing and design must evolve synergistically. Dominant nations achieved their status through an integrated progression of design, IP creation, R&D, and fabrication.
Future Outlook
India's challenge lies in ensuring its manufacturing push is complemented by a robust ecosystem for chip design and deep-tech innovation. This integration is key to transforming India from a mere workshop for global needs into a true center of global innovation. The next leap will involve not just manufacturing chips, but imagining and owning the chips the world will need.
Impact
This news is highly relevant for the Indian stock market, particularly for sectors involved in manufacturing, technology, R&D, and electronics. Government policies and private investment in semiconductors and indigenous design capabilities could drive significant growth, influencing investor sentiment and market performance. The focus on innovation has the potential to reshape India's economic landscape and its position in global supply chains.
Impact Rating: 9/10