Tech & Society

Indian Protectionism Drives Xiaomi Supplier to Plan for Manufacturing in India

While US policy on H1B visas is giving Indian companies sleepless nights, Indian protectionism is making Chinese companies take some important decisions. Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s ‘Make in India’ policy focuses on encouraging local production. As part of this strategy, New Delhi has hiked tariffs for imported smartphones from 10% to 15% in December. The hike is likely to go upto 15% in April. This explains Chinese electronics company, Xiaomi’s decision last year to build its third phone factory and first power bank facility in India.

As a result, Chinese company Q Technology, which supplies mobile phone components to Xiaomi, is planning to move a unit of its camera module manufacturing to India. The company is a growing entity in camera and fingerprint modules and caters to several Chinese smartphone makers and is planning a visit to India in the coming month.

While releasing financial results, Q Technology chairman He Ningning told the Nikkei Asian Review that the Indian government may be hiking prices for imported mobile phone components. Ningning said that in contrast, US, in spite of the Trump administration’s protectionism might be a better option, because apart from ZTE, Chinese smartphone makers don’t own a big stake in the US market.

The Nikkei Asian Review reported Ningning as saying that “some economic powers may enter into an interest rate hike cycle.” This protectionism “may pose new barriers for entry [by Chinese smartphone makers] into overseas markets, and affect their overseas expansion.”

According to the market research firm IDC, in 2017, Chinese manufacturers owned the majority of the $124 million Indian smartphone market

Xiaomi, which is called the Apple of China, took only three years to make it big in India. It is known to have used online marketing as its prime strategy, and is the first brand to reach where it is now, that is, Samsung’s competitor. Products like Redmi Note 4, Redmi 4 and Redmi 4A are its best-selling phones.

Navanwita Bora Sachdev

Navanwita is the editor of The Tech Panda who also frequently publishes stories in news outlets such as The Indian Express, Entrepreneur India, and The Business Standard

Recent Posts

India Inc. Increments are Stabilizing at ~9% as Companies Focus on Cost Discipline: Deloitte India Talent Outlook

Against the backdrop of a resilient macroeconomic environment and sector-specific growth dynamics, salary increment budgets…

5 hours ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

7 hours ago

Fundraising Is Storytelling, Not Slide-Building—And AI Is Changing That Equation

For years, many founders believed that successful fundraising was about building the perfect pitch deck.…

1 day ago

AI Launches: Infrastructure, Mobile Phones, Sales, Cloud & Crypto

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

1 day ago

These 15 Indian CEOs are accelerating innovation in the era of AI

As the growth prospects of economies around the world battle against skyrocketing costs, geopolitical instability,…

2 days ago

India’s tech pulse: Ecosystem harkat & the shifting investment temperament

India has been upping the game in investments as Indian startups forge ahead with new…

2 days ago