Indian government wants
Apple, but not all officials are biting
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[January 19, 2017]
By Sanjeev Miglani and Rajesh Kumar Singh
NEW
DELHI (Reuters) - Some Indian officials have balked at Apple's demands
for concessions before it assembles iPhones there, raising doubts about
a spring deadline to launch a key project in Prime Minister Narendra
Modi's campaign to lure foreign investors.
The country is still keen for the U.S. tech giant to produce its
signature smartphones there, and Information Technology Minister Ravi
Shankar Prasad said on Wednesday that India would keep an "open mind" in
negotiations.
"We will very much like Apple to come and have a base in India," he
said.
But Apple Inc's long list of demands, including tax concessions and
several other policy exceptions, still faces resistance from officials
who consider it excessive and unfair on foreign companies already
operating in India.
Their caution underlines how Modi's ambition to make India a global
manufacturing hub, in order to drive the economy and create jobs for
millions of people entering the workforce each year, will not be easy.
"We have not done this for anyone," said a senior government official
whose department is one of several involved in evaluating the Apple
proposal. "If we do this, we must see a lot of value addition."

Another official involved in the review said the government should make
policies for the industry, not individual companies.
"Apple is coming here because it sees a lucrative market, this is not a
favor being done to India."
Competitors such as South Korea's Samsung Electronics <005930.KS> and
China's Xiaomi have already set up manufacturing in the country.
Apple did not respond to a request for comment.
LETTER SPELLS OUT DEMANDS
Modi met Apple CEO Tim Cook last May and discussed iPhone production in
India.
Where any plant would be located and how many people it might employ
have yet to be finalised, although it would likely involve thousands of
jobs.
Attracting such a household name would be a valuable advertisement for a
country shaking off a reputation for stifling bureaucracy, but officials
are wary of tailoring rules to individual investors.
"What Apple is trying to do, if it happens, I think it will be available
to everybody in the industry. I don't see the government of India making
discriminatory policies," said Arvind Vohra, chief executive at Gionee
India, part of Chinese smartphone maker Gionee.
It is setting up a local manufacturing plant under India's existing
rules.
From Apple's point of view, the ambitious timeline agreed by Modi and
Cook reflected its need to capture more of the fast-growing Indian
market, where it has only about 2 percent share as iPhone sales in the
United State and China have slowed.
In a letter sent to the prime minister's office on Oct. 13 and seen by
Reuters, it called on the government to "make the environment
attractive" for it to make phones for the Indian market as well as for
export.
On the matter of duties, it said high import taxes on smartphones could
lead to retaliation from trading blocs.
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A salesperson waits for customers at an Apple reseller store in
Mumbai, India, January 12, 2017. Picture taken January 12, 2017.
REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade

"This
would increase the cost of India manufactured smartphones and in turn limit
India's ambition of becoming a smartphone hub for the rest of the world."
Despite the reluctance of some officials, Modi could intervene to get the Apple
project back on schedule.
In June, the government relaxed local sourcing rules for foreign retailers like
Apple barely a month after the finance ministry turned down the company's
request for a waiver.
The company and its partners have reportedly won significant concessions before
in other markets.
MEETING NEXT WEEK
On Jan. 25, the departments of industry, information technology and electronics,
and finance will meet Apple executives to consider the conditions set out by the
firm in India, government officials said.
In May, Modi and Cook agreed to work towards a "package" of four projects:
assembling iPhones, opening Apple stores, importing certified pre-owned iPhones
and refurbishing them in India, according to the letter.
Apple said its initial focus was to set up manufacturing of iPhones in India
over two phases, the first of which was to be introduced by spring this year.
But after conducting due diligence on what it would take to get the project
going, it determined its entry was "dependent on government support on a number
of pre-requisites."
The Cupertino, Calif.-based company listed a set of seven demands. Among them,
it sought duty exemption on raw materials for manufacturing, components and
capital equipment for 15 years for both domestic and export markets.
Apple
also sought a change in rules that would govern how it could import defective
iPhones to repair and export them again, a move it said was crucial for it to
keep supporting and repairing older models of the iPhone.
Currently, Indian rules restrict such imports to phones that are no older than
three years. Apple asked for the government's help in quickly processing a
request for a ruling from Indian tax authorities on transfer pricing agreements
between its affiliates.

It also identified India's customs procedures as a hurdle to manufacturing and
asked the government to make them less onerous.
"For trusted traders inspections need to be less intrusive - this means less
boxes opened," Apple wrote. "The complete process should not require more than
thirty minutes."
(Additional reporting by Sankalp Phartiyal in MUMBAI and Nidhi Verma in NEW
DELHI; Editing by Mike Collett-White and Paritosh Bansal)
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