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Updated May 30, 2026 · 09:55
Technology News Updated May 30, 2026

India's Semiconductor Push: A Strategic Imperative for Viksit Bharat

A new NITI Aayog report emphasizes that building a domestic semiconductor ecosystem is critical for India's economic resilience, national security, and societal upliftment. India currently imports 90-95% of its chip needs, exposing defence, healthcare, and consumer electronics to supply chain disruptions. The country's semiconductor import bill has grown 23% annually, reaching $30.3 billion in FY25, and could reach $240 billion by 2035 if unchecked. Leveraging its 20% global semiconductor design workforce, India must accelerate initiatives like the India Semiconductor Mission to achieve self-reliance by 2047.

India's semiconductor push a strategic imperative, self-reliance critical for Viksit Bharat: NITI Aayog

New Delhi, May 30

India must accelerate efforts to build a domestic semiconductor ecosystem, with self-reliance in chips emerging as central to economic resilience, national security and societal upliftment, according to a new report by NITI Aayog.

While government initiatives like the India Semiconductor Mission are driving transformation and the country's first fabrication plant in Gujarat's Dholera is expected to commence production by 2028, the report warns that India's semiconductor manufacturing remains nascent and the window to act is narrowing as global supply chains realign.

"With chips becoming the foundation of everything from smartphones to defence systems, countries are racing globally to build semiconductor self-sufficiency," the report states. For India, the urgency is compounded by four factors: significant import dependence, national security risk, drain on forex, and the need for societal upliftment.

India's local ecosystem meets just 5-10 per cent of domestic demand, with 90-95 per cent of consumption fulfilled through imports. Global supply is concentrated in a handful of countries, and disruptions in Taiwan or China could trigger shortages as seen during Covid-19, exposing automobiles, consumer electronics, healthcare and defence to "untoward disruptions in the global supply chain." As electronic content rises, "the economic cost of such disruptions will only intensify," the report notes.

"Chips have become increasingly important to national security and defence programmes. As many semiconductor parts used in defence systems are produced outside India, deploying them in our aerospace and defence programmes is increasing threats to national security," it said. UAVs, naval and airborne platforms depend on semiconductor imports. A domestic source is "well positioned to safeguard the autonomy of our defence programmes" as India modernizes its capabilities.

The report noted that India spent almost USD 150 billion on semiconductor imports between FY17-FY25. Imports grew at a CAGR of 23 per cent in that period, rising from USD 5.7 billion in FY17 to USD 30.3 billion in FY25. "If this pace persists, the annual import cost could increase to USD 240 billion by 2035," the report cautioned.

Next-gen 5G/6G technologies can expand rural connectivity, enable remote healthcare and support precision agriculture, but "the affordability of 5G/6G-enabled devices is a prerequisite." India-made chips "will be decisive" in lowering handset costs and making benefits accessible.

India already has strengths: leading global fabless majors run captive design centres here, leveraging a deep talent pool that accounts for 20 per cent of the global semiconductor design workforce. Firms are also making investments in assembly and packaging.

"Recognising the pivotal role of semiconductors and sustaining their growth is vital to cementing India's position in the global value chain and building an inclusive, resilient society--both indispensable to accelerating India's journey towards 'Viksit Bharat 2047'," the report said.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Pooja D

Great analysis by NITI Aayog. The part about 5G/6G enabling rural healthcare and precision agriculture really resonated with me. Made-in-India chips could make smartphones affordable for the poorest villages. That's real societal upliftment, not just big industry talk. Hope the government fast-tracks this.

Michael C

Interesting insights. As an expat working in Bangalore's tech sector, I see the potential here. But $150 billion on imports in under a decade is scary. If India can capture even 20% of domestic demand locally, the savings would be game-changing. The window is indeed narrowing though—political will needs to match ambition.

Sneha F

I'm cautiously optimistic. We've heard similar big plans before—remember the semiconductor policy from 2012? It didn't materialize. But the recent investment from Micron and others gives some hope. What worries me is the skill gap: we have designers but need many more fab engineers. The education system needs urgent reform. 🇮🇳

Kiran H

The national security angle is underappreciated. Defence systems running on imported chips is a huge vulnerability. Remember the Atmanirbhar Bharat push? This is where it matters most. If we can't secure our supply chain for UAVs and naval platforms, we're compromising our strategic autonomy. Good that NITI Aayog is highlighting this.

Ramesh W

Waah, very good report! But I have one doubt—where will the water come from for these fabs? Chip manufacturing needs

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