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Automotive Industry Landscape in India

Kartavya Desk Staff

Syllabus: Economy

Source: PIB

Context: India’s premier think tank, NITI Aayog, in collaboration with CRISIL, released the report titled “Automotive Industry: Powering India’s Participation in Global Value Chains”, outlining a strategic roadmap to make India a key global auto component manufacturing hub.

About Automotive Industry Landscape in India:

Global Ranking & Output: India is the 4th largest automobile producer globally, with 28 million vehicles manufactured in 2023–24 across all segments (two-wheelers to commercial vehicles).

Export Trends: Auto component exports reached $20 billion, forming 3% of global trade in 2023. India aims to triple exports to $60 billion by 2030.

Domestic Market Growth: A booming middle class and policy incentives have led to increased demand for EVs and small cars.

Value Chain Positioning: India’s trade ratio of auto components is 0.99 (balanced import-export), highlighting untapped export potential.

Policy Support: Key government schemes include PLI, FAME-II, PM E-Drive, and ACC Battery Storage—catalysts for manufacturing scale-up.

Importance of Automotive Sector in Indian Economy:

GDP Contribution: Accounts for 7.1% of India’s GDP and nearly 49% of manufacturing GDP.

E.g. India’s auto industry supports over 3 million direct jobs.

Linkages with Other Sectors: Strong backward and forward linkages with steel, rubber, electronics, glass, IT etc.

E.g. 15% of India’s steel goes to automotive sector.

Employment Generation: Potential to add 2–2.5 million jobs by 2030 with planned scaling.

E.g. Skilled and semi-skilled roles in OEMs, ancillaries, and EV startups.

Technology Spillovers: Driving AI, battery innovation, and Industry 4.0 adoption across sectors.

E.g. Automotive is the biggest consumer of semiconductors after electronics.

Export Competitiveness: Aims to increase GVC share from 3% to 8%.

E.g. India’s current share in global component trade: ~$20B out of $700B.

Key challenges faced by automotive industry:

Cost Disadvantages: India faces ~10% cost disability compared to China, mainly due to higher material and capital costs.

E.g. India has a 100% depreciation rate vs. China’s 50%.

Low Share in Precision Components: Only 2–4% share in engine and transmission systems, which form 60% of global auto component trade.

E.g. Weak competitiveness in ADAS, steering systems.

Import Dependence: Heavy reliance on China, South Korea, Germany for high-end parts.

E.g. Imports from China: $2.8B in 2023–24.

Infrastructure & Logistics Bottlenecks: Delays in multimodal connectivity and insufficient auto clusters.

E.g. Higher domestic freight costs reduce export margins.

R&D and Skill Gaps: Inadequate industry-academia linkages, limited skilled workforce in EV and software-led automotive technologies.

E.g. EV battery cell manufacturing talent is limited.

Way Ahead:

Expand Component Production: Scale up to $145 billion output by 2030, focus on emerging & precision segments.

E.g. Focus areas: EV batteries, ADAS, smart sensors.

Boost R&D and IP Support: Strengthen innovation through fiscal R&D incentives, testing labs, and tech transfer schemes.

E.g. Cluster-based approach with IP cells and CoEs.

Build Smart Infrastructure: Invest in logistics parks, plug-and-play clusters, and testing facilities.

E.g. Smart automotive hubs in Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra.

Deepen Global Trade Linkages: Leverage FTAs, joint ventures, and branding support for “Made in India” auto components.

E.g. India-EU and India-UK trade deals in focus.

Skill India for Auto GVCs: Launch GVC Skilling India Scheme to train for high-tech auto jobs.

E.g. Emphasis on battery tech, mechatronics, and vehicle software.

Conclusion:

India’s automotive sector is at a critical inflection point, offering immense opportunities to integrate into global value chains. With targeted reforms, skilling, and investment support, India can become a world-class hub for EV components, auto electronics, and precision systems, driving both domestic growth and global competitiveness.

• “Success of ‘Make in India’ program depends on the success of ‘Skill India’ programme and radical labour reforms.” Discuss with logical arguments. (USPC-2019)

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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