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Government planning semiconductor design-linked incentive policy

Global majors such as Qualcomm, Intel, Mediatek, Infineon, and Texas Instruments have their research and development in India which contribute in the development of their chipsets.

Topics
semiconductor | semiconductor industry

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

semiconductor, integrated circuit IC, chipset, technology, internet of things, electronics, mobile, smartphone, manufacturing, make in india, chips, taiwan, graphic

The government is planning to come up with a design-linked incentive policy to promote domestic manufacturing as well as attract global electronic chip companies to the country, according to an official source.

Global majors such as Qualcomm, Intel, Mediatek, Infineon, and Texas Instruments have their research and development in India which contribute in the development of their chipsets.

"The government is deliberating on a new design-linked incentive scheme which envisages financial and infrastructure support for Indian MSMEs and startups right through the ideate stage to production stage. As and when these startups start producing and selling chips in the market, they shall also avail additional incentives under the scheme on their net sales turnover," an official source told PTI.

Minister of State for Electronics and IT Rajeev Chandrasekhar last week had said that the government would host a conference of companies in November to discuss India's policy roadmap in the segment.

"It is a great initiative which will leverage India's strength to make an impact in the field of design of semiconductors. We can target to have 25 plus fabless companies in the next few years which will make a substantial impact in the global semiconductor market," industry body IESA chairman Rajeev Khushu said.

The semiconductor design is the main driver of revenues that electronic chip companies earn from sale of their high end components.

(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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First Published: Tue, October 26 2021. 16:14 IST
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