HomeNewsOpinionIndia’s true manufacturing rival is Vietnam, not China

India’s true manufacturing rival is Vietnam, not China

Though India is getting a lot of overseas investment, Foxconn Technology Group’s announcement last month that it will spend $100 million on a new plant in Vietnam is a reminder that it doesn’t hold a monopoly over business migration away from China. India stands out among peers in implementing higher import duties, which motivate companies to set up in the country to supply local consumers but makes them less competitive in the export market

February 08, 2024 / 11:19 IST
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If India wants to build a robust computer and electronics manufacturing industry, it needs to shift focus, fast. Instead of concentrating on the domestic market, it should become regionally competitive and export-driven. That means recognising that Vietnam, not China, is its biggest rival.

The latest reminder of this urgency came last week with a US appeal for New Delhi to make the business environment easier and more transparent to navigate, or keep losing out on foreign direct investment. Cutting import duties ought to be high on the list, US Ambassador to India Eric Garcetti told the Indo-American Chamber of Commerce on Jan 30.

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If you tax inputs, you are taxing your outputs, Garcetti noted. “You are not taxing us, you are not protecting the market. What you are doing is limiting a market.”

A day later, the Indian government reduced tariffs on a range of imported components including battery covers, lenses, antennae and mechanical parts to 10 percent from 15 percent. The timing might look like New Delhi was following orders, but it’s more likely a coincidence and even possible that Washington knew it was coming.