According to m.economictimes.com, China’s new supply chain control regime — formalized in April 2026 via Decrees 834 and 835 — is directly threatening India’s ambition to become a global electronics manufacturing hub. The measures impose regulatory retaliation, operational restrictions, and personal liability on senior executives who approve production shifts out of China.
Regulatory Scope and Enforcement Mechanism
The decrees significantly expand Chinese regulators’ authority to scrutinize, intervene in, and act arbitrarily on supply chain decisions made by global firms — including those planning or executing diversification into India. Under the new rules, even routine compliance activities such as information collection and supply chain diligence now fall under legislative oversight. Crucially, Decree 835 mandates personal sanctions on corporate decision-makers, meaning any executive who signs off on building a factory in India as part of a China+1 strategy could face punitive measures.
Impact on Indian Electronics Manufacturing
India’s electronics industry has formally approached the Central government seeking urgent relief, citing risks to supply chain stability, foreign direct investment, and export growth. Executives told The Economic Times that despite progress in domestic supply chain development, India still relies critically on imports from China — including electronic components, assemblies, and capital equipment — to sustain manufacturing operations and fulfill export orders. The timing is acute: Beijing’s action came just weeks after India relaxed Press Note 3 restrictions in early May 2026 to accelerate manufacturing investments under its China+1 strategy.
Industry and Government Response
A senior executive at one of India’s top electronics manufacturers stated:
“These decrees significantly expand the authority of Chinese regulators to scrutinise, intervene and act arbitrarily in supply chain decisions taken by firms, including global players, which have either shifted or are planning to move their supply chains to India.”
A second executive added:
“The Chinese don’t want to cede space to India, and therefore, they have tightened controls, virtually stalling any efforts by global players to diversify.”
According to a government official speaking on condition of anonymity, the issue is under inter-ministerial consultation, and the government is assessing potential countermeasures. Apple — a key anchor for India’s electronics ecosystem — declined to respond to queries about the impact on its India-bound supply chain.
Broader Industry Context
This regulatory shift occurs against a backdrop where India’s electronics exports surged to $32.1 billion in FY2025, up from $19.4 billion in FY2023, according to Ministry of Commerce data. Over 230 electronics manufacturing units have been approved under India’s Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme since 2020, with cumulative committed investments exceeding $12.4 billion. Meanwhile, global peers are adjusting: Vietnam’s electronics exports grew 18.7% year-on-year in Q1 2026, while Mexico reported a 22% increase in semiconductor-related FDI approvals in the same period. For supply chain professionals, the immediate implication is heightened due diligence on dual-sourcing feasibility, accelerated localization of Tier-2 and Tier-3 components, and mandatory legal review of executive sign-off protocols for overseas facility expansions.
Source: m.economictimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










