After the election results, Prime Minister Narendra Modi said the government will accelerate the progress in electronics, and new and upcoming sectors. Experts emphasise that semiconductors are key to societal growth and should become a 'non-political agenda'
Prime Minister Narendra Modi may be set for a historic third term, only this time around, he has to reckon with a new reality—of a coalition government, with partners known to extract their pounds of flesh. That may not impact the direction of economic reform, and policy making and execution, but the billion-dollar question is whether the tempo of a few big-bang government initiatives will be impacted.
How, for instance, will Make in India and the financial incentives that come with initiatives in terms of production-linked incentives to manufacture, expand and export play out in the new dispensation?
Hours after the dust had virtually settled on the final electoral picture on June 4, the prime minister appeared undeterred by the narrower-than-expected victory, and reiterated that the focus will continue to be on sunrise manufacturing sectors and making India self-reliant. “We have made India the second-largest mobile manufacturing country. Now we will accelerate the progress in electronics, semiconductors, and the new and upcoming sectors,” he said in a speech at the BJP headquarters in New Delhi after the results on Tuesday.
Analysts at Bernstein predict the NDA will form the government, but add that in an extreme scenario, such as if the opposition wrests the alliance's key allies, their investment approach to India would change materially. “The government’s policy of pushing manufacturing and construction is the right approach, but it will take several years to succeed.”
With the government aiming to rise two ranks up and become the third-largest economy, it will be crucial to increase the current 13 percent share of manufacturing, which has remained consistent in the past years. It will also be important to keep global investments flowing in to boost growth in the burgeoning semiconductor sector.