India IT ministry fears losing out to China, Vietnam in smartphone
exports race
Send a link to a friend
[February 13, 2024] By
Aditya Kalra and Munsif Vengattil
NEW DELHI (Reuters) - India risks losing out to China and Vietnam as it
seeks to become a major smartphone export hub and must "act fast" to
lure global companies with lower tariffs, the deputy IT minister said in
government documents seen by Reuters.
Smartphone manufacturing is a key plank of Prime Minister Narendra
Modi's ambitions to boost the economy and create jobs by attracting
companies such as Apple, Foxconn and Samsung to India, the world's
second-largest mobile market where production grew 16% year-on-year to
$44 billion last year.
That success, Modi's government says, is mostly due to financial
incentives given to companies to produce more. But lawmakers and lobby
groups for Apple and other firms argue India's high tariffs are a
deterrent for companies de-risking their supply chains beyond China, and
nations such as Vietnam, Thailand and Mexico have raced ahead in phone
exports by offering lower tariffs on components.
A Jan. 3 letter and a confidential presentation drafted by Indian deputy
IT Minister Rajeev Chandrasekhar, and sent to the Finance Minister, show
the extent of his ministry's concerns about losing out due to the
uncompetitive tariffs.
"India has high production cost due to highest tariffs amongst key
manufacturing destinations," wrote Chandrasekhar in the documents, which
were seen by Reuters.
"The geopolitical realignment is forcing supply chains to shift out of
China ... We must act now, or they will shift to Vietnam, Mexico and
Thailand."
Chandrasekhar and India's IT ministry did not respond to Reuters
requests for comment.
Lower tariffs on components is key to India's ambitions to attract
smartphone manufacturers.
"Made in India" phones use many parts made locally, but companies import
many high-end parts from China and elsewhere due to supply chain
limitations. These parts are then subject to the high tariffs the
government has put in place to protect the local manufacturers, raising
overall costs.
U.S. Ambassador Eric Garcetti recently said foreign investments were not
flowing into India at the pace they should be, and were going to
countries like Vietnam instead, because of the tariffs. "If you tax
inputs ... you're not protecting a market. What you are doing is
limiting a market," he said.
Chandrasekhar in his documents flagged how lower taxes in China and
Vietnam helped boost their exports. Exports accounted for only 25% of
India's smartphone production last year, compared with 63% of China's
$270 billion worth of production and 95% of Vietnam's $40 billion worth,
he said.
[to top of second column] |
Indian Deputy Minister for Information Technology, Rajeev
Chandrasekhar, speaks during an interview with Reuters at his office
in New Delhi, India, May 19, 2023. REUTERS/Anushree Fadnavis/File
Photo
"MATCH CHINA, BEAT VIETNAM"
India is seeking to account for 25% of global electronics
manufacturing by 2029, but the official documents showed its stake
was currently at just 4%, even though Apple, Foxconn and Xiaomi had
all boosted production recently.
Chandrasekhar's documents were addressed to India's Finance Minister
Nirmala Sitharaman last month to lobby for lower tariffs in the
annual budget. The finance ministry did lower taxes on some
components, including battery covers, to 10% from 15%, but did not
agree to many other tariff cut requests.
The finance ministry and Sitharaman's office did not respond to
requests for comment.
India still imposes a 20% tax on parts including chargers, some
circuit boards and fully assembled phones. The IT minister wanted
those taxes to be reduced to 15% this year.
Chandrasekhar also argued that Vietnam and China do not levy tariffs
above 10% on components from their "most-favoured nation" trading
partners or nations with whom they have free-trade agreements. India
does not do that and imposes "high" tariffs on many components, he
said.
"We have to match China and beat Vietnam on tariffs to attract"
global supply chains, Chandrasekhar wrote. "No country with high
tariffs has or can attract" them.
LOCAL MARKET SATURATING, EXPORTS FOCUS
Last week, Xiaomi privately asked New Delhi to lower tariffs on more
components used in cameras and USB cables, saying it will help
"aligning with the competitive manufacturing economies like China
and Vietnam."
While surging local demand has helped keep the local manufacturing
industry profitable, Chandrasekhar said in his letter that this
"domestic market of smartphones will shortly near saturation" and as
users don't change phones that often.
India's goal to take mobile phone production to over $100 billion a
year - with 50% of that exported - needs a new strategy, the
minister said.
"Tariffs are becoming a hurdle," the minister said in his
presentation. "We need to shift tariff policy to suit our new
ambitions. Exports, not domestic."
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Munsif Vengattil; Additional
reporting by Shivangi Acharya, Nikunj Ohri and Aftab Ahmed; Editing
by Miral Fahmy)
[© 2024 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|