India wants to be among the world's top five semiconductor producers in the next five years, said Ashwini Vaishnaw, minister of electronics and information technology, railways and communications.
The chip industry "is a very complex market, and global value chains and global supply chains are extremely complex in the current context," Vaishnaw said on CNBC's Street Signs Asia on Friday.
As of December, Taiwan holds about 46% of global semiconductor foundry capacity, followed by China (26%), South Korea (12%), the U.S. (6%) and Japan (2%), according to market intelligence firm TrendForce.
I call it 'trust shoring' because there is a global trust in India," Vaishnaw said.
"A lot of our chips are designed in India, and that presence in India is also creating opportunities for a number of Indian companies."
Persons:
Ashwini Vaishnaw, Vaishnaw, Narendra Modi, Frank Huang, Rajeev Chandrasekhar
Organizations:
Qualcomm, CNBC, Tata Electronics, Powerchip Semiconductor Manufacturing Corp, PSMC, Economic Times
Locations:
India, Taiwan, China, South Korea, U.S, Japan, Chennai