HomeNewsIndia NewsASSOCHAM study: What would make 'Make in India' a failure?

    ASSOCHAM study: What would make ‘Make in India’ a failure?

    To ascertain the success of the ‘Make in India’ initiative by the Government of India (GoI), it must be directed towards import intensive items like electronic goods, machinery, steel and transport equipment, states an ASSOCHAM analysis. It says that the success of the flagship programme would boost the manufacturing sector in India.

    The study revealed that the aforementioned products add close to USD nine billion to the country’s import expenditure.

    A growing economy like India which is witnessing a huge expansion in usage of telecom and other items using electronics , should go about in a focused manner to drastically cut imports of the items which can be substituted by domestic production and add to the country’s manufacturing strength. This is eminently doable, provided the policy initiatives are put in place and implemented with great clarity and speed both by the Centre and the states, the chamber said.

    The latest figures show import of close to USD four billion for electronics, .USD 2.36 billion for electrical and non-electrical machinery, USD 1.47 billion for transport equipment and about USD one billion for iron and steel.

    Owing to expanding demand for user industries particularly telecom, automobile, smart consumer devices, the annualised imports of electronics goods grew by 24.56 percent in January, 2017.

    The Make in India should focus on these select items and ensure that their manufacture in India either by the domestic investor or even foreign investor should be quite rewarding. Besides, the tax structure should be such that it should make the domestic manufacture far more competitive than imports, said ASSOCHAM secretary general D.S. Rawat.

    Similarly, investments can be made in transport equipment while some leeway should be provided to the steel manufacturers.

    In an environment where fresh investment is hard to come in several key sectors of the economy, electronics is one area where the country does not have adequate capacity and highly import dependent. Thus, investment in the sector from both domestic and global firms should be welcomed and promoted. States like Karnataka have taken some initiative, but much more needs to be done in the sector which is generally pollution free and is required greatly, added Rawat.

    ELE Times Bureau
    ELE Times Bureauhttps://www.eletimes.ai/
    ELE Times provides a comprehensive global coverage of Electronics, Technology and the Market. In addition to providing in depth articles, ELE Times attracts the industry’s largest, qualified and highly engaged audiences, who appreciate our timely, relevant content and popular formats. ELE Times helps you build awareness, drive traffic, communicate your offerings to right audience, generate leads and sell your products better.

    LEAVE A REPLY

    Please enter your comment!
    Please enter your name here

    Related News

    Must Read

    Optimized analog front-end design for edge AI

    Courtesy: Avnet Key Takeaways: 01.   AI models see data differently: what...

    Introducing Wi-Fi 8: The Next Boost for the Wireless AI Edge

    Courtesy: Broadcom Wi-Fi 8 has officially arrived—and it marks a...

    Vehicle to Grid (V2G) Charging in EVs: Understanding the Basics

    Much of the research around emerging technologies in Electric...

    Asia-Pacific Takes the Lead in AI Adoption Across Manufacturing

    Courtesy: Rockwell Automation Manufacturing around the world has undergone a...

    STMicroelectronics streamlines smart-home device integration with industry-first Matter NFC chip

    STMicroelectronics has unveiled a secure NFC chip designed to...

    Mitsubishi Electric India to Showcase Breakthrough Power Semiconductor Technologies at PCIM India 2025

    Mitsubishi Electric India, is set to introduce its flagship...

    ASMPT Wins New Orders for Nineteen Chip-to-Substrate TCB Tools to Serve AI Chip Market

    ASMPT announced it had won new orders for 19...

    Microchip Halves the Power Required to Measure How Much Power Portable Devices Consume

    Battery-operated devices and energy-restricted applications must track and monitor...