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Times of India·5 min read·medium

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

T
TOI BUSINESS DESK
The biggest hurdle in India's chip race isn't the plan—it's execution
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A report by Equirus Securities suggests that India's semiconductor ambitions are hindered more by execution challenges than by strategy. While India has a strong design talent pool, it lacks domestic manufacturing equipment and supply chain infrastructure.

India has a game plan to become a semiconductor powerhouse, but the real test begins now.According to a recent report by Equirus Securities, the biggest hurdle is not strategy, but execution, with heavy reliance on imported equipment and gaps in the domestic supply chain posing key challenges. The report said India's semiconductor roadmap draws on proven approaches adopted by leading Asian chip-making economies instead of attempting to build an entirely new model. The country has steered clear of the Chinese approach while incorporating government-backed research and development from Taiwan, foreign direct investment-led manufacturing from Malaysia, domestic champions from South Korea, and capital discipline from Singapore.Now, execution is the biggest hurdle and not strategy. The report said that India needs to rapidly develop a skilled workforce, strengthen local supply chains and meet globally competitive quality standards.The report highlighted that India is concentrating on segments where it already holds a competitive edge, supported by a talent base of nearly three lakh chip designers, representing around one-fifth of the global semiconductor design workforce.It added that the country's semiconductor strategy is focused on outsourced semiconductor assembly and test (OSAT) and mature process nodes ranging from 28nm to 110nm. These account for a significant share of global wafer capacity and are widely used across automotive, industrial and consumer applications."Demand-led import substitution underpins the case, with chip consumption set to more than double to about $155 billion by CY31," the report said.Despite these strengths, the report said India is expected to continue importing more than 90% of its semiconductor manufacturing equipment, along with the majority of specialty chemicals and electronic-grade gases required by the industry.It also pointed out that although India has a strong pool of chip designers, it faces a shortage of manufacturing-specific talent, including process engineers, metrology specialists, yield engineers and cleanroom technicians.The report described the goal of producing 85,000 industry-ready engineers by CY27 as ambitious but achievable. It cited Micron's Sanand ATMP facility, which became operational with around 2,000 trained workers within three years of construction, as an example.While describing India's semiconductor policy as one of its most credible industrial initiatives, the report said several gaps still need to be addressed. These include stronger incentives for chip design, the lack of a robust equipment and materials ecosystem, and limited prospects for manufacturing chips below the 28nm node in the near term.It added that the proposed 28nm fabrication facility at Dholera would continue to be considered a mature-node project by global standards even after reaching scale.According to the report, the country's dependence on imports for upstream equipment and raw materials remains the biggest weakness in its semiconductor ambitions. It estimated that India will continue to import more than 90% of chip-making equipment and between 85 and 90% of specialty chemicals and electronic-grade gases.Get the latest business news and top stories. Download the TOI App.Ready to Make a Smarter Property Decision? Build Your Legacy with TOI Homes.

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