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Hardware

India Launches $2 Billion Drive To Woo Laptop Makers Like Apple (bloomberg.com) 19

India is unveiling a 170 billion-rupee ($2.1 billion) financial incentive plan to draw makers of laptops, tablets and other hardware to the South Asian nation as companies look to diversify supply chains beyond China. From a report: Prime Minister Narendra Modi is capitalizing on the early success of Apple's local assembly operations -- which have helped the US company produce about 7% of its global iPhone output -- to pitch the country as a viable global manufacturing hub. New Delhi wants to bring more tech production to India after China's trade war with the US and its strict Covid policies prompted companies to weigh other options. Apple has yet to begin making iPads or MacBook laptops in India, but fresh incentives could push the Cupertino, California-based company to consider such moves. Other manufacturers who could take advantage of the new measures include Dell, HP and Asustek Computer.
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India Launches $2 Billion Drive To Woo Laptop Makers Like Apple

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  • by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday May 17, 2023 @09:59AM (#63528771)

    I have to wonder how much in the way of raw materials, semiconductors, and maybe even sub-assemblies used for manufacturing these products in India will ultimately come from China anyway.

    • Most would come from China I would guess. India has a fragmented and nascent manufacturing ecosystem. India's hope might be to bootstrap things and gradually move up in the value chain. The value proposition for Apple and friends might not be in the immediate future, but in the longer term, they might be able to diversify their supply chains.

      • Most would come from China I would guess. India has a fragmented and nascent manufacturing ecosystem. India's hope might be to bootstrap things and gradually move up in the value chain. The value proposition for Apple and friends might not be in the immediate future, but in the longer term, they might be able to diversify their supply chains.

        Along with these challenges for building up the necessary supply chains and support structures, another important question is how stable and reliable India will be in the future. There are several stability problems with China: political motivations that disfavor a company, laws that favor local companies at the expense of foreign companies, laws that require supporting Chinese political and military objectives, currency controls that prevent free movement of money, laws that intrude on Western notions of

        • by gtall ( 79522 )

          The biggest problem for India is Modi, he's incompetent. He'll gladly start a civil war by feeding the Hindu nationalists just to stay in power.

          • I agree. The other party, which is named 'Congress', is equally incompetent. They focus their energies on massive corruption. Large scale public protests due to their unbridled corruption at an unimaginable scale, led to their downfall. In their 5 years of rule, they ran financial scams worth tens (may be a hundred) of billions of USD! They keep the people distracted with caste based polarization. Giving more and more dole outs, at the expense of fiscal prudence. All to come back to power and continue with

      • It's something that would take time. China didn't grow to their position overnight and just like many countries before them went through a stage where they made the cheap, shitty goods that no one really wanted. It takes time to develop skill and know-how, and right now India doesn't have a lot of expertise in that area. Start small and nurture those capabilities and in 30 years India could be a powerhouse in their own right, but if you're just expecting to pick up and move shop wholesale, that's just going
  • Is it a hard drive or an SSD?

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