Rightly, the Government of India
has put in place a comprehensive industrial policy for electronics: It raised
tariffs on certain electronic goods such as TVs and laptops and two, launched a
Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme for large-scale electronics
manufacturing. Intriguingly, the PLI is currently focusing more on chip
manufacturing.
In this context, we need to take
a deeper look at chip-making. First things first. A semiconductor is a product
made of silicon, which conducts electricity more than an insulator such as
glass, but less than a pure conductor, such as copper or aluminium. The
conductivity and other properties of a chip can be altered by introducing
impurities, called doping, to meet the specific requirements of the electronic
device in which it is going to reside. As we all notice, today these chips are
found in many products such as smartphones, laptops, home appliances, gaming
hardware, motor vehicles, medical equipment, etc.
Success in the chip business
depends on creating smaller, faster, and cheaper products. The more the number
of transistors on a chip, the faster it can perform the task. Incidentally,
Moore’s law states that the number of transistors in a dense integrated circuit
doubles in every two years. But nowadays, the doubling period is reduced to
about 18 months. The result is: A consistent pressure on chip makers to come up
with something better and cheaper than what is today available in the market—no
matter even if it is considered as state-of-the-art.
Over it, the chip industry is
highly cyclical—it is exposed to boom and bust cycles. For, demand depends on
the demand for the end market products. Secondly, it is the hardest technical
activity, for it involves, correctly etching and connecting billions of
transistors that are 50 times smaller than a virus. And we lack the specialized
hardware as well as service and skills ecosystems that the chip industry calls
for. Thirdly, chip manufacturing calls for huge investments with long gestation
periods. Fourthly, it requires ultra-pure water in large quantities and
ultra-stable power supply.
Here, it is worth remembering
what Chris Miller, the author of the book, Chip
War, said in a fire-side chat at the Tamil Nadu Global Investors Meet:
“Governments should be sceptical of the idea that spending a lot of money on
fabrication is the best strategy. It could be in certain circumstances for
certain purposes but your marginal dollar is probably best spent in other parts
of the supply chain. There’s more money made in chip design each year than
there is in fabrication.”
Miller went on to say that India
already enjoys a distinctive advantage in chip design. For, currently more
Indians are working on chip design than anywhere else in the world. This fact
tells us that it makes more of a business sense to leverage on this part of the
supply chain rather than investing afresh heavily in chip making.
Looking at these constraints, one
wonders if India could become a global player in chip-making. Instead, as many
academicians are recommending, the government may consider supporting the development
of a cutting-edge fabless chip design industry in the country with appropriate
incentives. Encouraging innovation in designing chips by appropriate subsidies
may pave the way for the existing players to catch up with the high-end
demands. Reports indicate that there are already over
20,000 engineers in the country designing and supplying about 2000 chips every
year to third parties. So, leveraging on these strengths government should aid
businesses to transform into such companies that design and sell their chips
that are, of course, manufactured by a third party.
Similarly, we must also aim at
leveraging our known strengths in the field of assembly and testing to credibly
establish ourselves in the Outsourced Semiconductor Assembly and Test (OSAT)
and Assembly, Test, Marking and Packaging (ATMP) segments of the industry. Indeed,
these segments of the value chain are cheaper to set up and employ more people
too.
As the US and EU are looking for
new supply chains that exclude China, India can use its blooming relationship
with them to step into these non-manufacturing segments of the supply chain of
chips and make a mark for itself in the global chip industry as a reliable partner
in the chain.
Against this backdrop, Tata
Electronics is erecting a fabrication plant in Dholera, Gujarat with an
investment of around $ 11bn (Rs 91 000 cr) in technical collaboration with
Taiwan’s Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp. It will focus on
manufacturing legacy chips —chips of 28-nanometer—that are mostly used in automobiles,
consumer electronics and defence.
Another Tata company, Tata
Semiconductor Assembly and Test Pvt Ltd. is coming up in Assam with an
investment of $ 3.26 bn (Rs 27000cr) to develop “indigenous advanced
semiconductor packaging technologies” for automotive, EV and consumer
electronic segments.
M/s CG Power is building its
plant in Sanand, Gujarat in partnership with Japan’s Renesas Electronics
Corporation and Thailand’s Stars Microelectronics with an investment of $ 1bn
(Rs 7600 cr) to produce chips for consumer, industrial, etc., applications.
A couple of years back, Gujarat faced a shortage of even drinking water for supply to cities/towns. That aside, we also see the rush of fresh investment by giants such as Intel from the US, companies from Japan in partnership with Taiwan, and companies from the EU into chip manufacturing at the 'cutting edge'. Reports indicate a huge rush of companies from China, Korea, Japan and even Western countries to Malaysia to establish packaging, assembling, and testing chips. There is indeed a mad rush of fresh investment into semiconductor production, and amidst it, for a new entrant, the complexity and capital-intensive nature of chip manufacturing will become a real challenging endeavour.
Normally, semiconductor companies
are likely to realise positive cash flows within about five years, but if the
utilization drops below the installed capacity, it may take even longer. Over
it, the steady technological improvement being the mainstay of the semiconductor
industry, a ‘winner-take-all’ dynamic has become the norm of the industry, in
which a new player is certain to encounter stiff competition.
With so much at stake, the new players need to keep in mind all these consternations, which, of course, they would, for awareness of challenges may do a lot of good.
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