Tuesday, April 7, 2026
22.1 C
New Delhi

Will You Pay Less For Mobiles & TVs? Budget 2026’s Electronics Push May Cut Prices

Show Quick Read

Key points generated by AI, verified by newsroom

The Central Budget 2026 has given a big push to electronics manufacturing in India. The government has almost doubled the budget for the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme, increasing it from about Rs 23,000 crore to Rs 40,000 crore. This move is expected to strengthen India’s domestic supply chain and reduce dependence on imports. It may also attract more foreign companies to set up factories in India. 

Over time, this could lead to more jobs, higher local value addition, and possibly cheaper electronic products for Indian consumers.

Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme Budget 2026: What’s Changed

In the Budget 2026, the Government of India announced a major increase in spending under the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme. The Finance Minister said the scheme was launched in April 2025 with an outlay of Rs 22,919 crore. 

Since then, strong investment interest and ambitious production targets have pushed the government to raise the allocation to Rs 40,000 crore.

The Union Cabinet had approved the original outlay in March, and the response from the industry has been encouraging. So far, 46 applications have been approved under the scheme. 

These proposals together involve an investment of Rs 54,567 crore and are expected to create direct employment for nearly 51,000 people.

The government estimates that the scheme could generate production worth Rs 4.56 lakh crore and attract additional investments of around Rs 59,350 crore. 

Recently, the IT Ministry cleared 22 applications from major players like Foxconn, Tata Electronics, Samsung, Dixon Technologies, and Hikalco Industries.

Electronics Manufacturing In India: Impact On Phones, TVs, & Jobs

The Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme focuses on making key parts in India. These include display modules, camera sub-assemblies, PCBAs, lithium cell enclosures, resistors, capacitors, and ferrites. These components are used in smartphones, laptops, TVs, ACs, and home appliances like microwaves and refrigerators.

At present, even though companies like Apple and Samsung assemble products in India, local value addition is only about 15-20%. The government wants to raise this to 30-40%. 

Unlike the PLI scheme, which links incentives directly to production, this scheme offers benefits based on employment generation, capital investment, and annual output.

If components become cheaper due to local manufacturing, product prices may fall in the future. More importantly, the scheme aims to build a strong electronics manufacturing base in India, create jobs, and reduce reliance on imports in the long run.

Go to Source

Hot this week

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson steps down amid safety lapses, mounting losses: Report

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson has resigned amid mounting losses and ongoing safety concerns. He is currently serving his notice period to the company, according to the report by Mint. Read More

NASA’s Artemis II Heads Back To Earth After Circling The Moon In Historic Space Mission

The four astronauts were out of contact with NASA for 40 minutes as the Orion spacecraft circled around the far side of the Moon. Read More

Judiciary graft chapter: 3 academicians move Supreme Court against NCERT association ban

Image: IANS New Delhi: Three academicians engaged by NCERT as experts – Prof Michel Danino, Suparna Diwakar and Alok Prasanna Kumar – whom the Supreme Court banned for life “for projecting a negative image of judi Read More

KMVN gas manager dies, colleagues cite ‘work pressure’

Representative image (IANS) Pithoragarh: A 55-year-old manager of Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam (KMVN) gas agency in Champawat district died on Sunday evening after he returned from work. Read More

Iran war left mark on NATO, rift began with Greenland: Trump

Washington, Apr 7 (PTI): US President Donald Trump has lashed out at the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), accusing the alliance and other friendly nations such as South Korea, Japan and Australia of failing to help the US in the Iran war. Read More

Topics

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson steps down amid safety lapses, mounting losses: Report

Air India CEO Campbell Wilson has resigned amid mounting losses and ongoing safety concerns. He is currently serving his notice period to the company, according to the report by Mint. Read More

NASA’s Artemis II Heads Back To Earth After Circling The Moon In Historic Space Mission

The four astronauts were out of contact with NASA for 40 minutes as the Orion spacecraft circled around the far side of the Moon. Read More

Judiciary graft chapter: 3 academicians move Supreme Court against NCERT association ban

Image: IANS New Delhi: Three academicians engaged by NCERT as experts – Prof Michel Danino, Suparna Diwakar and Alok Prasanna Kumar – whom the Supreme Court banned for life “for projecting a negative image of judi Read More

KMVN gas manager dies, colleagues cite ‘work pressure’

Representative image (IANS) Pithoragarh: A 55-year-old manager of Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam (KMVN) gas agency in Champawat district died on Sunday evening after he returned from work. Read More

Iran war left mark on NATO, rift began with Greenland: Trump

Washington, Apr 7 (PTI): US President Donald Trump has lashed out at the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (NATO), accusing the alliance and other friendly nations such as South Korea, Japan and Australia of failing to help the US in the Iran war. Read More

15 Americans Wounded In Iranian Drone Attack On Kuwait Airbase: Report

The US Central Command reported that 373 American troops have been injured in the ongoing Iran war, as the conflict entered its sixth week. Read More

Trump threatens to take out Iran in ‘one night’ if no deal before deadline

“Obliterating all power plants, threatening coercive actions against the civilian population to try to bring a government to the negotiating table, those kinds of things are all flatly illegal,” former Obama-era National Security Council Read More

Trump’s deadline nears – with little indication Iran is on board

He and his national security team celebrated that most recent effort – which included coordinating hundreds of aircraft and elite military personnel and employing misdirection and technological wizardy. Read More

Related Articles