The magic this time, many say, lies in the PLI scheme, under which eligible players (five companies) are to receive incentives ranging from 4 per cent to 6 per cent of production value for five years, provided they achieve their investment and production value target for each year. Also, the global players will have to export phones priced over $200 (that is, Apple phones). Even Samsung has applied for benefits under the scheme.
The total incentives for mobile phones as estimated by the government comes to $5.3 billion. This is expected to partly neutralise the production cost differential between China and India (that ranges from 9 per cent to 20 per cent).
This also marks India’s aggressive entry into the global mobile export market, dominated at present by China and Vietnam, which control over 80-85 per cent of world exports. The total value of mobile phone exports from India as of 2019-20 stood at a meagre Rs 27,000 crore. But the PLI scheme is expected to give it a fillip. The new electronics policy is targeting $110 billion worth of mobile phone exports by 2025. That will make India the largest exporter after China — ahead of Vietnam, which will be pushed to number three.
India at present is a very small market for Apple Inc, accounting for only 0.5 per cent of its global revenues (based on FY19 figures) and just 3.5 per cent of its revenues from Greater China, which is Apple’s largest market after US and Europe. The question now is whether Apple will replicate in India its China model of concentrating on both domestic and export markets. After all, can Apple afford not to play a larger role in an annual smartphone market of 150 million people?