According to gulfnews.com, India has eliminated import duties on key smartphone and electronics components—including wireless charging modules, display assembly parts for automotive and medical applications, lithium-ion cells, and battery manufacturing machinery—with the exemption valid until March 31, 2029.
Targeted duty exemptions to lower costs and accelerate localization
The Indian government removed existing 7.5% and 5% import duties on a defined set of electronics inputs. The relief applies specifically to:
- Parts used in wireless charging modules for mobile phones
- Components for display assemblies deployed in automotive, medical, and industrial equipment
- Lithium-ion cells
- Machinery dedicated to lithium-ion battery manufacturing
The move is designed to reduce landed costs for electronics manufacturers operating in India and improve domestic value addition. According to the report, the exemption framework is technology-neutral—meaning it does not restrict eligibility based on cell chemistry or battery format—and consolidates previously fragmented customs provisions into a single, unified structure.
Strategic support for Apple, Samsung, Xiaomi, and battery ecosystem
Apple, Samsung, and Xiaomi are among the global electronics firms expected to benefit directly from the duty removal, as all three have significantly scaled local manufacturing operations in India over the past five years. The cost reduction is projected to enhance production efficiency and reinforce India’s role as an alternative global electronics hub amid ongoing supply chain diversification efforts.
Rajat Mohan, Managing Partner at AMRG Global, told PTI that the new framework simplifies customs procedures, removes end-use-based distinctions, and reduces compliance burdens—thereby encouraging investment in integrated battery production facilities. He noted that the consolidation “will help manufacturers plan long-term capital expenditure with greater certainty.”
Broader manufacturing ambitions and measurable progress
These tariff adjustments form part of India’s wider electronics manufacturing strategy, anchored by the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme. The government aims to grow the sector to $500 billion by fiscal year 2030. Government data cited by Reuters and PTI confirms substantial recent growth: smartphone production in India increased 28 times over the past decade, reaching ₹5.45 trillion ($57 billion) in the 2024–25 financial year.
“This should boost cost competitiveness, domestic value addition and localisation of high-value smartphone and electronics manufacturing.” — Manoj Mishra, Partner at Grant Thornton Bharat
Mishra emphasized that the lithium-ion cell exemption, in particular, could catalyze domestic battery production across three critical segments: consumer electronics, smartphones, and electric mobility. Industry practitioners note that predictable, multi-year duty relief—especially one extending to 2029—lowers the risk premium for foreign investors evaluating India as a battery cell or pack manufacturing base.
Supply chain implications for global electronics OEMs
For supply chain professionals managing electronics procurement and manufacturing footprints, the policy shift lowers landed cost volatility for imported subassemblies and raw materials while reducing administrative overhead tied to customs classification disputes. With duty-free access now guaranteed for three-and-a-half years, companies can lock in longer-term contracts with Indian contract manufacturers and localize more stages of the value chain—from module integration to final test and packaging.
Unlike ad hoc tariff suspensions, this exemption carries explicit end dates and clearly scoped product definitions—enabling precise landed-cost modeling and inventory planning. Analysts observe that the timing aligns with the ramp-up phase of several PLI beneficiaries’ second-generation factories, suggesting coordinated policy sequencing between fiscal incentives and trade measures.
Source: gulfnews.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










