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The biggest hurdle in India's chip race isn't the plan—it's execution
India🏛️ PoliticsCenter3 days ago

The biggest hurdle in India's chip race isn't the plan—it's execution

India aims to establish itself as a major player in the global semiconductor industry, leveraging strategies inspired by successful models from other Asian countries. However, according to a report by Equirus Securities, the main challenge lies not in the strategic planning but in the execution of this vision. Key obstacles include the heavy reliance on imported equipment, gaps in the domestic supply chain, and a shortage of specialized manufacturing talent such as process engineers and cleanroom technicians. The report highlights that India's focus is on segments like outsourced semiconductor assembly and testing, where it already has a competitive advantage, supported by a large pool of chip designers. Despite these strengths, the country is expected to continue importing over 90% of its semiconductor manufacturing equipment and related materials. The report acknowledges the ambition of training 85,000 industry-ready engineers by 2027 but notes that achieving this goal requires addressing several remaining gaps.

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1 reports

Times of India logoTimes of IndiaIndependentCenterFactual 85Objective 783 days ago
The biggest hurdle in India's chip race isn't the plan—it's execution

India aims to establish itself as a major player in the global semiconductor industry, leveraging strategies inspired by successful models from other Asian countries. However, according to a report by Equirus Securities, the main challenge lies not in the strategic planning but in the execution of this vision. Key obstacles include the heavy reliance on imported equipment, gaps in the domestic supply chain, and a shortage of specialized manufacturing talent such as process engineers and cleanroom technicians. The report highlights that India's focus is on segments like outsourced semiconductor assembly and testing, where it already has a competitive advantage, supported by a large pool of chip designers. Despite these strengths, the country is expected to continue importing over 90% of its semiconductor manufacturing equipment and related materials. The report acknowledges the ambition of training 85,000 industry-ready engineers by 2027 but notes that achieving this goal requires addressing several remaining gaps.

Bias read (Center): The article presents a balanced overview of India's semiconductor industry challenges, focusing on technical and economic factors rather than taking a stance on political issues. It discusses both the opportunities and hurdles without apparent ideological bias.

Why these scores (Factual 85 · Objective 78): Factuality is high as the article accurately reports on the Equirus Securities report and provides data on India's semiconductor strategy. Objectivity is slightly lower due to some promotional language about India's 'competitive edge' and emphasis on positive aspects without balancing potential crit

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