India Prime Minister Narendra Modi Apple Inc., Samsung Electronics Co. and Xiaomi Corp. have been stepping up their efforts in India as growth in the U.S., China and other markets slows. Apple CEO Tim Cook made his first trip to India in May and his company has been lobbying for the right to set up its own retail stores. Under current rules, companies such as Apple need to procure 30% of their components in India if they want to operate their own retail outlets.
The smartphones and feature phones sold in India over the next five years will together require more than $80 billion worth of components, up from the current $11 billion. If the country can move up the value chain from simple assembly to more complex manufacturing, it could take the domestic contribution to 32% by 2020, the researchers said.
India is also encouraging local manufacturing of components by raising import levies on components and devices. Apple is still contemplating India’s retail requirements and has so far not committed to local manufacturing. However, Foxconn Technology Group, its leading manufacturing partner, has been exploring factories in India for Apple, according to local media.
The government’s next set of policy reforms will encourage greater local work to meet smartphone growth numbers, said Ajay Kumar, additional secretary, department of electronics and information technology in the Indian government, in a release at the unveiling of the report. “The final goal is to cut down on the value of imports,” he said.
The country has made progress in attracting more assembly plants. Before the launch of Make in India, the country had only two phone assembly facilities and that number has now increased to about 50 facilities. Eighty percent of those are local companies and 10% are each Chinese and Taiwanese. The plants assemble phones for the world’s leading brands including Samsung and Huawei Technologies Co.
Counterpoint estimated that over 180 million mobile phones will be assembled in India in 2016, accounting for 67% of the total 267 million sold. This is a rise from 14% in 2014.
By Saritha Rai