According to timesofindia.indiatimes.com, Beijing’s newly formalized supply chain control framework — embodied in Decrees 834 and 835, issued in April 2026 — is emerging as a direct constraint on India’s electronics manufacturing ambitions. The measures, introduced as part of China’s broader effort to strengthen domestic supply chain sovereignty, are already prompting urgent industry outreach to the Indian government, according to sources cited by Economic Times (ET).
Regulatory Expansion with Real-World Consequences
The decrees significantly broaden the authority of Chinese regulators to scrutinize, intervene in, and even halt supply chain decisions made by multinational firms — including those actively shifting production to India. As one senior executive at a top-tier electronics manufacturer told ET:
“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.”
Crucially, the framework extends oversight to routine compliance practices — such as information collection and supply chain diligence — bringing them under formal regulatory purview for the first time.
Personal Liability and Strategic Timing
Perhaps most consequential is the introduction of personal sanctions on corporate decision-makers. Executives who approve manufacturing diversification strategies — including greenfield investments or joint ventures in India — may now face punitive action under the new rules. A second industry executive emphasized the strategic timing:
“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.”
This comes just after India eased Press Note 3 restrictions to accelerate foreign investment under its China+1 strategy — a deliberate policy shift designed to attract Apple suppliers and other Tier-1 electronics manufacturers.
India’s Structural Dependency Persists
Despite over seven years of policy initiatives — including the Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme launched in 2020 and expanded in 2023 — India remains critically dependent on Chinese imports for key enablers of electronics manufacturing. Industry executives confirm that components, assemblies, and capital equipment sourced from China continue to be indispensable for sustaining both domestic output and export growth. For example, over 70% of printed circuit board assemblies (PCBAs) used in Indian smartphone manufacturing were imported from China as of Q1 2026, per data compiled by the India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA). Apple’s Indian supplier base — which includes Foxconn, Pegatron, and Wistron — relies on Chinese-sourced tooling, test fixtures, and semiconductor packages for over 65% of its current production volume.
Government Response and Cross-Border Coordination
In response to mounting concerns, the Indian electronics industry formally approached the Centre in early May 2026. According to a government official speaking anonymously to ET:
“The government is aware of the developments and will see what best can be done after consultations with industry.”
The official noted that inter-ministerial coordination — involving the Ministry of Commerce and Industry, Ministry of External Affairs, and the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) — is already underway. This mirrors similar cross-departmental efforts seen in the EU’s 2023 Critical Raw Materials Act and the U.S. CHIPS and Science Act of 2022, both of which established dedicated interagency task forces to monitor supply chain dependencies.
Source: timesofindia.indiatimes.com
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.









