Cabinet okays revised IT hardware PLI scheme with Rs 17,000-cr outlay
The revised scheme may offer incentives of up to nine per cent on the incremental sales of laptops, tablets, all-in-one PCs, servers and edge computing devices manufactured in the country to attract investments in the sector. The tenure of the scheme is extended to six years from four years announced in 2021.
The Centre now aims to make the scheme more flexible by allowing original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) to apply for incentives in the scheme anytime in the next three years. The base year for comparing incremental sales will be 2022-23. Companies will also be able to apply anytime in the next three years, giving them room to choose their base year, a government official said.
The cap on maximum incentive for global companies will be Rs 4,500 crore, while for those who fall under hybrid category may get a maximum incentive of Rs 2,250 crore. For domestic companies, there will be a cap of Rs 500 crore. According to the government’s presentation to the industry stakeholders, the number of eligible beneficiaries will be two from the global category, five from the hybrid and nine from the domestic category.
The average incentive over six years will be about five per cent, up from two per cent offered earlier. Companies that assemble devices with certain locally manufactured components may get additional incentives. Those assembling hardware with locally made processors may get incentives of three per cent of incremental sales. In aggregate, the incentives may sum up to 8-9 per cent.
According to the government’s estimates, the new scheme is likely to generate 75,000 direct jobs. Vaishnaw said indirect job creation may be thrice the direct jobs and could reach around 200,000 people. The minister said electronics manufacturing in India is growing at a CAGR of 17 per cent for the last eight years and has crossed a benchmark of $105 billion in production value.
“The PLI 2.0 scheme for the IT hardware sector aims to boost domestic manufacturing and attract large investments and jobs over the coming years. It will create additional incentives for companies to invest/set up their manufacturing base in India and also the original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) that incorporate Indian-designed IP into their systems and their products,” said Rajeev Chandrasekhar, minister of State (MoS) for Electronics and Information Technology.
With inputs from Surajeet Das Gupta
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