PM tells semiconductor industry that ‘our government will be like AND Gate’
The Hindu
To facilitate ease of doing business in India, the government has abolished over 25,000 compliance norms, mostly obsolete ones, and also gave a push towards auto-renewal of licences
The previous government was like a ‘Not Gate’ whereas this one would be like an ‘And Gate’ for the semiconductor industry, said Prime Minister Narendra Modi while inaugurating the three-day Semicon India 2022 conference being held in Bengaluru.
“In earlier times, industries were ready to do their work, but the government was like a ‘Not Gate‘. When any input flows into the ‘Not Gate‘, it gets negated,” the Prime Minister said on April 29 through video-conferencing. “We understand that the government must be like the ‘And Gate’. While the industry works hard, the government must work even harder.”
To facilitate ease of doing business in India, his government has abolished over 25,000 compliance norms, mostly obsolete ones, and also gave a push towards auto-renewal of licences.
The Prime Minister said India is headed for a robust economy. “India’s own consumption of semiconductors is expected to cross $80 billion by 2026 and is expected to reach $110 billion by 2030,” he added.
“We are paving the way for India to lead the next technology revolution. We are on our way to connect 600,000 villages with broadband. We are investing in developing capabilities in 5G, Internet of Things and clean energy technologies,” he said.
He urged captains of Indian industry to establish India as one of the key partners in global semiconductor supply chains and work towards hi-tech, high quality and high reliability.
India has all the reasons to become an attractive investment destination globally for semiconductor technologies, Modi insisted. “We are building the digital infrastructure to connect over 1.3 billion Indians, and UPI is the world's most efficient payment infrastructure today,'' he said.