India's government announced a Rs 1.64 lakh crore investment plan to establish domestic semiconductor manufacturing capacity, ending decades of import dependency for chips that power everything from defence systems to mobile networks. The commitment arrives as Digital India completes its eleventh year, marking the inflection point where policy rhetoric becomes fabrication infrastructure.
The plan funds multiple fabrication facilities across the country, with state governments in Gujarat, Assam, and Tamil Nadu already securing site agreements for advanced packaging and assembly plants. The first wafers are expected by late 2025, with volume production targeted for 2027. The investment splits roughly 60-40 between greenfield fabs and advanced packaging facilities, according to statements from the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology. Global foundry partners including Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corporation and Israel's Tower Semiconductor have signed binding memoranda.
This matters because India currently imports 100% of its semiconductors, creating strategic vulnerability in defence procurement, telecommunications infrastructure, and consumer electronics manufacturing. The country consumed approximately $24 billion worth of chips in 2023, a figure projected to exceed $80 billion by 2030 as domestic electronics production scales. Every percentage point of localisation removes forex exposure and shortens supply chains for manufacturers already operating under Production Linked Incentive schemes. The timing coincides with Western efforts to diversify chip supply away from Taiwan and China, positioning India as the third pole in a reconfiguring global semiconductor architecture.
The announcement also signals capital reallocation within India's maturing family office ecosystem. Professionalised family offices, now operating with dedicated investment committees and sector specialists, are increasing allocations to private equity and venture capital funds focused on deep tech and industrial infrastructure. These offices, historically conservative and real-estate-weighted, are recognising that India's semiconductor buildout creates adjacent opportunities in precision engineering, cleanroom construction, rare earth processing, and chip design tooling. The semiconductor plan effectively de-risks an entire vertical for domestic institutional capital.
Operators should monitor three developments over the next eighteen months. First, the disbursement schedule for the Rs 1.64 lakh crore fund, which will reveal whether capital flows frontload fabrication or spreads across the value chain. Second, equity participation terms for global foundry partners, particularly whether India insists on majority domestic ownership or accepts minority stakes in exchange for technology transfer. Third, recruitment patterns at Indian Institutes of Technology and private engineering colleges, where semiconductor coursework expansions will indicate serious talent pipeline investment rather than performative policy.
The first production wafers will not emerge until 2025, but the bond auctions to fund this plan begin within sixty days.