
The industry was unable to meet the government deadline for ECMS requirements, prompting a sharp warning that those unwilling to align could opt out of the scheme
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PTI
India’s electronics push is running into its first real stress test, with the Centre continuing talks with manufacturers even after a 15-day deadline set by Minister of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) Ashwini Vaishnaw to firm up plans on design capability, Six Sigma quality standards, talent development and local sourcing under the Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) has lapsed.
Vaishnaw had struck a rare hard line, telling companies that if they were not serious about upgrading capabilities, they could “walk out of the scheme,” and stressing that “the ball is now in the industry’s court” and “we have to be in tango.”
The deadline itself followed a series of nudges from MeitY. In January, the Minister had asked companies to prioritise building dedicated design teams and to adopt Six Sigma practices to stay competitive in global value chains.
On March 30, he formalised that push with a 15-day timeline for firms to submit concrete action plans across key parameters including product design, quality processes, talent pipelines and local sourcing strategies.
The industry, however, was unable to meet the deadline, prompting the Minister’s sharp warning that those unwilling to align could opt out of the scheme altogether.
Quality Framework
More than a month later, consultations remain ongoing, underlining the gap between policy intent and industry preparedness. Government and industry are still working through the targets, sources told businessline, even as the Ministry continues parallel discussions with industry bodies to shape the contours of a quality framework and define job roles in electronics manufacturing.
“The information is being compiled. Also, we are discussing with industry bodies to evolve quality framework and also job roles in electronics manufacturing. We should get this going soon,” a senior government official said.
The Ministry had also pulled up the India Cellular and Electronics Association (ICEA) and its member firms at a March event for not adhering to the integrated approach laid out by MeitY to build a high-quality, self-reliant electronics ecosystem under the ECMS, which was launched in April 2025.
Back and Forth
Industry representatives, however, say the process is moving, albeit slower than envisaged. A government-constituted committee has been meeting regularly since early April to work out pathways to strengthen research and development (R&D) within firms, both to qualify under the ECMS and to align Indian manufacturers with global benchmarks.
“We have been meeting regularly since early April to discuss all possibilities. Companies do not want anything to be left unchecked, and they also do not want to miss any opportunity under the scheme,” an industry representative said, requesting anonymity.
The ECMS, which runs for six years from FY26 to FY32, is aimed at building a deeper domestic electronics component ecosystem and reducing import dependence. It covers a wide range of segments including sub-assemblies, bare components such as printed circuit boards, connectors and lithium-ion cells, as well as capital goods and other supply chain inputs.
Even so, the ongoing back-and-forth points to a deeper structural challenge: India’s shift from a subsidy-led assembly model to one driven by design capability, quality standards and indigenous value addition is proving far more complex than anticipated, forcing a quiet recalibration between the government’s policy ambition and the industry’s current capacity to deliver.
Published on May 3, 2026
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