Tarun Pathak, research director at Counterpoint Technology Market Research, unpacks India's efforts to boost local manufacturing
India's consumption of semiconductor components is projected to hit $300 billion in 2026. Smartphones will continue to account for the largest share of that. Therefore, raising the level of local value addition is critical.
Tarun Pathak, research director at Counterpoint Technology Market Research, tracks devices and ecosystems, and explains how India has more than doubled this metric in recent years and how it could do it again.
In India, initially, only Nokia and Samsung were assembling phones. Then came the ‘Make in India’ initiative. By 2016, there were around 150 manufacturers, with over 200 assembling companies operating in the country. Annual phone assembly numbers soared from 35-50 million to 200 million within just two years, achieving a 90-95 percent local assembly rate by 2018-2019.
The quest to move beyond entry-level phones in the assembly process led to a milestone when Apple decided to assemble iPhones in India in 2017-2018, leading to almost complete assembly within the country. India’s overall annual assembly volume reached 300 million units, culminating in over 2 billion units assembled in the past five to six years.