India considers $23 billion package to lure global manufacturers
Hindustan Times
Dated 10.09.2020
By Prashasti Singh
India is planning to offer incentives worth 1.68 trillion rupees ($23
billion) to attract companies to set up manufacturing in the South Asian
nation, people with knowledge of the matter said.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s government will offer production-linked
incentives to automobile manufacturers, solar panel makers, and specialty steel
to consumer appliance companies, according to documents reviewed by Bloomberg
News. Textile units, food processing plants and specialized pharmaceutical
product makers are also being considered for the plan.
The incentive program, being spearheaded by the country’s policy
planning body, uses the template of a scheme implemented earlier this year to
draw businesses away from China. About two dozen companies including Samsung
Electronics Co., Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., known as Foxconn and Wistron
Corp. pledged $1.5 billion of investments to set up mobile-phone factories in
the country, according to the government, after authorities offered to pay them
an amount equivalent to 4%-6% of their incremental sales over the next five
years.
New Delhi has been working on attracting investments to revive an
economy that posted its worst slump among major economies last quarter, when it
contracted 23.9%. Corporate taxes are already among the lowest in Asia, while
insolvency rules were overhauled to improve the ease of doing business. But
those have done little to make it the first choice for businesses looking to
diversify supply chains away from China.
Vietnam continues to be the most favored destination, followed by
Cambodia, Myanmar, Bangladesh and Thailand, according to a recent survey by
Standard Chartered Plc.
“The move will definitely have a positive impact on manufacturing,
especially for so-called booming sectors such as solar and electronics,” Madan
Sabnavis, chief economist at Care Ratings Ltd. said. “It is a good way of
attracting investments and has potential to make a difference in these
sectors”.
The government is also planning to introduce a phased manufacturing
program for other sectors to allow companies to gradually increase local
value-addition. The program, currently in vogue for components and accessories
used for mobile phones, is proposed to be extended for furniture, plastics,
toys and low-value consumer durables. Most of these items are currently
imported from China.
The details of both the programs are being worked out and would be put
up for the approval of the federal Cabinet soon, they said.
A spokesperson for Niti Aayog, the government’s policy think tank,
didn’t answer a call made during business hours.
India imported goods worth $65 billion from China in the year ended
March 31, while its exports to the neighboring nation stood at $17 billion,
leaving a trade deficit of $48 billion, according to latest government data.
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