"The change in duty structure will encourage manufacturing of consumer premise equipment like modems, routers, digital video recorders, set-top-boxes and IP cameras. We expect a billion US dollars worth of investment inflows for their local production," MAIT Vice President Nitin Kunkolienker said in a statement.
He said that prices of these products would go down by 8 per cent in the first year itself and by 10 per cent over 18 months.
The Manufacturers' Association for Information Technology (MAIT) has, however, expressed concern on government meeting only partial demand of industry.
"Budget 2016 has met our demands partially and will help the Indian ICT industry move from assembly to the next level of manufacturing. However, certain products have been missed out, most notably laptops and notebooks and populated Printed Circuit Boards," MAIT Executive Director Anwar Shirpurwala said.
He said that in order to create an effective IT-ESDM manufacturing supply chain, it is very important to exclude populated PCBs from the purview of nil rate of duty, that is, the levy of 12.5 per cent counter-veiling duty and 4 per cent special additional duty, where such differential duty benefit is currently extended.
"We are disappointed with announcement of R&D incentives reducing because this move could be detrimental in building India as an innovation hub. I strongly urge the government to reconsider this move, as any restrictions on the R&D ecosystem are likely to decelerate innovation and restrain the ambitious Make in India and Digital India vision," MAIT President Debjani Ghosh said.
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