AS MANY as 12 international and domestic companies have submitted
initial offers of investment to the Department of Telecommunications
(DoT) under the telecom products’ production-linked incentive (PLI)
scheme, sources in know of the development said.
Taiwan’s Rising Star, an arm of Foxconn, US-based Sanmina Corp, Jabil, Nokia, Samsung,
Ciena, Mavenir USA and Ericsson are among the international companies,
while Gurgaon-based VVDN Technology, Noida-based Dixon Technologies
India, Coral Telecom and HFCL are the domestic companies that have shown
interest so far, sources said.
All these companies fall under the non-micro, small and medium
enterprises segment and will be required to make a minimum investment of
Rs 100 crore. In February this year, the Central government had cleared
a Rs 12,195-crore PLI scheme for domestic manufacturing of telecom and
networking products such as switches, routers, radio access network,
wireless equipment and other internet of things (IoT) access devices.
The working guidelines for these companies were notified on June 3.
As per the norms, the year 2019-2020 will be considered the base year to
calculate incremental sales for the PLI scheme, which is scheduled to
run from April 1 this year to March 31, 2026.
Though the government has agreed to consider the expenditure incurred
on plant and machinery as investment for determining eligibility for
the incentives under the PLI scheme, it has also limited the amount of
the funds the companies can spend on research and development (R&D)
as well as technology transfer.
While the expenditure incurred on R&D cannot exceed 15 per cent
of the total investment committed by the companies, the money to be
spent on technology transfer cannot exceed more than 5 per cent, as per
the norms.
The idea behind capping the investment on R&D as well as
technology transfer, a senior DoT official said, was to ensure
“incremental production” over the next five years.
“The priority right now in this PLI, as well as others, is
incremental sales and production. While R&D is good for the long
term, the immediate requirement is to make sure companies invest in
production lines,” an official said.
Any investments in R&D will yield results only in the long run,
which is not what the telecom ministry wants right now, other officials
said.
“Only those investments, which are done after April 1 this year, will
be considered. And, there was a demand from the industry that they
would need some help in the R&D as well as transfer of technology.
So, if companies, on their own, spend more on R&D instead of
focusing on production, the result will take much longer to come,” one
of the officials said.
The telecom ministry is also unlikely to accept the demand of the
industry to push the base year for consideration of incentives under PLI
to 2020-2021 from 2019-2020, the officials said.
“The industry had been kept in loop all through the designing of the
scheme. They knew very well when the scheme would start, when it would
end and what are the various investments that would be considered. We
feel that there would be no need for extension of the scheme’s deadlines
right now,” an official said.