Interpreting India

Crafting a Semiconductor Policy for India with G S Madhusudan

Episode Summary

In this episode of Interpreting India, we’ll take a closer look at the Indian government’s semiconductor policy and the country’s potential in the space. What have governments across the world been doing to strengthen production capability? How do they compare with India’s semiconductor policy of December 2021? What does this ramping up of semiconductor capabilities mean for the world?

Episode Notes

Today, semiconductors are ubiquitous—whether it’s the device on which you’re streaming this episode, the drive assist or safety features of a car, or aerospace and defense equipment. In the last couple of years there has been a dearth of semiconductor supply. The semiconductor shortage today can be attributed to supply chain disruptions and several geopolitical factors that have their origins in the early days of COVID-19. Realizing the importance and potential of semiconductors, countries around the world, including India, have been investing in the semiconductor capabilities. In December 2021, the Indian government unveiled a Rs 76,000 crore scheme to boost semiconductor manufacturing, chip design and assembly, and testing and packaging (ATP) of chips.

In this episode of Interpreting India, G S Madhusudan joins Konark Bhandari to take a closer look at the Indian government’s semiconductor policy and the country’s potential in the space. What have governments across the world been doing to strengthen production capability? How do they compare with India’s semiconductor policy of December 2021?  What does this ramping up of semiconductor capabilities mean for the world?     

Episode Contributors

G S Madhusudan is the CEO and Co-Founder of InCore Semiconductors, India’s first Processor IP company. A technology entrepreneur with more than 30 years of experience in creating start-ups, G S Madhusudan is also committed towards engineering diverse software and hardware products, managing R&D labs and is intricately involved in technology/product strategy development. 

Konark Bhandari is an associate fellow with Carnegie India. He is a lawyer who has researched on certain areas in the digital economy, focusing primarily on approaches to antitrust regulation of companies in the digital realm. 

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Additional Reading

We Will Be Competitive With Equivalent ARM Cores, Better In Some Respects Perhaps Lagging In One Or Two Areas by G S Madhusudan

IIT-Madras Powers Up a Desi Chip by G S Madhusudan

Takeaways from the 2021 Global Technology Summit by Konark Bhandari

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Episode Transcription

Transcript

Konark

Hello and welcome back to interpreting India, as the world looks hopefully to emerge in the shadow of the coronavirus pandemic,

Konark

2022 has so far been defined by another variant of the COVID-19 virus, vicarious geopolitical relations, and a rapidly evolving technological landscape. 

Konark

This season, we at Carnegie India are examining many of the challenges and opportunities that India will confront in the coming decade.

Konark

I'm your host Konark Bhandari and this week we're discussing semiconductor policies.

Konark

Today, semiconductors are ubiquitous, whether it is a device in which you are streaming this episode, the driver assist or safety features of a car

Konark

Or aerospace or defense equipment in the last couple of years there has been a dearth of semiconductor supply.

Konark

The semiconductor shortage today can be attributed to supply chain disruptions and several geopolitical factors that had their origins in the early days of COVID 19.

 

  Konark

Realizing the importance and the potential of semiconductors, countries around the world, including India, have been investing in semiconductor capabilities. In December 2021, the Indian government unveiled the 76,000 crore rupees scheme to boost semiconductor manufacturing, chip design and assembly and testing and packaging of chips.

Konark

In this episode of Interpreting India, we will take a closer look at the Indian government semiconductor policy and the country's potential in this space.

Konark

What have governments across the world been doing to strengthen production capability and how do they compare with India semiconductor policy of December 2021?

Konark

What does this ramping up of semiconductor capabilities mean for the rest of the world?

Konark

To help us navigate some of these questions we have with us today, Mr. G S Madhusudan.

Konark

Mr. G S Madhusudan is the CEO and co-founder at InCore Semiconductors.

Konark

India’s first processor IP company, a technology entrepreneur with more than 30 years of experience in creating startups.

Konark

Mr Madhusudan is also committed towards engineering diverse software and hardware products, managing R&D labs, and it's intricately involved in technology product and strategy development.

Konark

Mr Madhusudan, Welcome to interpreting India, delighted to have you with us.

 G S Madhusudan

Thank you for inviting me, glad to be here.

Konark

Let us begin by understanding what are the key factors for India to make a massive push for having a successful semiconductor industry?

Konark

Now I've chosen the words there carefully and the words I used there are key factors.

Konark

We'll get to the semiconductor policy a bit later in the course of the podcast, but what would be the factors?

Konark

So you know, people usually harp upon things like tech partnerships, infrastructure, talent, pool, ease of doing business, you know, supplier ecosystem.

Konark

But what do you think are the key factors?

 G S Madhusudan

Typically, we tend to overcomplicate things, right?

 G S Madhusudan

Ignore everything that you know about this

  G S Madhusudan

and concentrate on just two things,

 G S Madhusudan

There are really two things that matter,

 G S Madhusudan

Local consumption of semiconductors and exporting stuff that is manufactured here, right?

 G S Madhusudan

Both have different issues that stand in the way of India succeeding.

 G S Madhusudan

Local consumption always depends on the amount of products being consumed. In India five years ago, local consumption was insignificant in terms of TV's or mobile phones and all of that

 G S Madhusudan

But that is history Right?

 G S Madhusudan

 We consume enormous amount of electronics products.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, so demand for local semiconductors. Is there everything from parts in mobile phones, TV's to washing machines to fans and all of that?

 G S Madhusudan

You don't have to go to the high end super duper mobile phone chips and all that, right?

 G S Madhusudan

Tiny little controllers sitting in the fans and all of that, so we need to understand where the local demand is.

 G S Madhusudan

Especially in terms of volume.

 G S Madhusudan

And figure out what will it take to create local products?

 G S Madhusudan

That is what it is

 G S Madhusudan

The second is export, we keep talking about fabs, but electronics export is a lot more than just fabs correct?

 G S Madhusudan

If you take a typical $10 semiconductor,

 G S Madhusudan

The fab cost is probably $2.00 Max. Their imports depending on how complex it is 

 G S Madhusudan

The rest of it comes in intellectual property in terms of packaging 

 G S Madhusudan

in terms of R&D expenses and engineering expenses.

 G S Madhusudan

So, if I were to design chips locally and have local packaging plants which are coming without having a single fab in the country, I can still capture 80% of the value.

 G S Madhusudan

If you capture 80% of the value you’re there, right?

 G S Madhusudan

So you don't need to have a fab thrust to have a thriving local semiconductor industry.

 G S Madhusudan

Qualcomm, Apple, Broadcom, AMD all of these are big names in the US.

 G S Madhusudan

None of them own their own fabs 

 G S Madhusudan

Yet the products that are designed are considered the American products, in spite of the fact

 G S Madhusudan

That the TSMC in Taiwan probably is.

 G S Madhusudan

A major leading thing, right?

 G S Madhusudan

So, uh, fab is not a necessary condition to have a thriving local industry.

 G S Madhusudan

There's a lot of other factors at play, right so

 G S Madhusudan

We kind of need to recognize that

 G S Madhusudan

And if you take low-cost semiconductors so semiconductors costing below $20.

 G S Madhusudan

It is no longer viable to design and manufacture these in the West.

 G S Madhusudan

Uh, so, and it can only be kind of shifted to India or China.

 G S Madhusudan

No other country when Taiwan to some degree 

 G S Madhusudan

Because we also need things like documentation, technical support, field application support.

 G S Madhusudan

All of that right it requires a lot of manpower also

 G S Madhusudan

Semiconductor support is an inherently manpower-intensive industry.

 G S Madhusudan

Also it's not just manufacturing

 G S Madhusudan

As much services industry as manufacturing India in fact is better suited for that than China.

 G S Madhusudan

So both in terms of local consumption

 G S Madhusudan

And in terms of export

 G S Madhusudan

We need to recognize what do we consume locally, and what can we export.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, once you decide that these are

 G S Madhusudan

The three thrust areas then

 G S Madhusudan

You do the policy to figure out what is required to ramp up?

 G S Madhusudan

And we've kind of got the card backwards.

 G S Madhusudan

We're looking at fabs and then figure out what we can do with fab right?

 G S Madhusudan

You should decide what products India can build for the local market and for the export market and decide what kind of ecosystem

 G S Madhusudan

We need to create

 G S Madhusudan

Here we already may have a lot of ecosystem components, right?

 G S Madhusudan

What is missing in and stuff

 G S Madhusudan

Yeah, in that respect high end fab is should be low priority item 

 G S Madhusudan

In fact, old fabs, 180 nanometer, 300 nanometer, 90 nanometer fab small optical fabs, Gallium Nitride fabs, all of that matters.

 G S Madhusudan

Most of the world semiconductor consumption is still what I call ancient technology.

 G S Madhusudan

So ignore the glamour

 G S Madhusudan

And focus on the bread and butter 

 G S Madhusudan

How many of us go around marrying models and stuff?

 G S Madhusudan

I mean we all marry none of the people and have happy successful lives

 G S Madhusudan

Same thing applies to semiconductors

 G S Madhusudan

I don't know why glamour has to figure so prominently in semiconductors, semiconductors are boring, solid hardcore engineering.

 G S Madhusudan

Glamour has no role to play in it 

 G S Madhusudan

and the instant you introduce glamour, everything goes for a toss

  G S Madhusudan

So it's simple to get an industry here

 G S Madhusudan

it's not that difficult, we just need to focus on what we can consume, what we can export and go about it

Konark

So many things to unpack in that Mr Madhusudan Ha

Konark

We spoke about exporting it, so I'll just get to get to this point, right

Konark

Now you know

Konark

How would India's trade partnerships in this regard hurt or you know help or stalls

Konark

Success in this in this particular area, I mean India is missing from the ARCEP

Konark

India is not a part of, you know the TPP.

Konark

How would you, possibly you know, position India if it is to export its semiconductor successfully

Konark

How would that

Konark

How would that look like?

 G S Madhusudan

See we keep talking about atmanirbharta

 G S Madhusudan

But before atmanirbharta you need atmavishwas, which is what is lacking.

 G S Madhusudan

We don't need trade partnerships.

 G S Madhusudan

We don't need to give a damn.

 G S Madhusudan

About the world, we can ignore most of these things.

 G S Madhusudan

You create great products here.

 G S Madhusudan

You can sell those products on the strength of those products.

 G S Madhusudan

We are a civilizational entity, 

 G S Madhusudan

We are not just a chota mota country right?

 G S Madhusudan

That's why I said low cost

 G S Madhusudan

Semiconductors below $20-25. You do these manufacturing volume

 G S Madhusudan

You can get the markets.

 G S Madhusudan

Ultimately Uh, if BMW wants chips

 G S Madhusudan

It will buy from the

 G S Madhusudan

Best supplier at the best price.

 G S Madhusudan

Irrespective of whether we have

 G S Madhusudan

A trade agreement with Germany or not

 G S Madhusudan

See all these trade agreements partnerships

 G S Madhusudan

Is that compensation for perceived weakness on our part?

 G S Madhusudan

I frankly think all trade agreements are a waste of time.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, focus on building great products.

 G S Madhusudan

See what the country lacks.

 G S Madhusudan

The reason why we are.

 G S Madhusudan

Lagging, and I've no idea why we make great cars.

Right?

 G S Madhusudan

We can't conceptualize good products and create them.

 G S Madhusudan

Because we're used to engineering other peoples designs rights, correct?

 G S Madhusudan

It's very tough.

 G S Madhusudan

It's next to impossible to

 G S Madhusudan

Find a good VP of Marketing for semiconductors in India.

 G S Madhusudan

You're gonna get VP of engineering, right?

 G S Madhusudan

So we need to learn the art of conceptualizing and creating products, finding out market niches and stuff.

 G S Madhusudan

Once you do that

 G S Madhusudan

I'm dead serious, I see, especially when it comes to all the trade agreements.

 G S Madhusudan

First thing they do is try to impose patents on us

 G S Madhusudan

I've been fighting patent battles on behalf of Indian companies in Delhi High Court 

 G S Madhusudan

So, every trade agreement I have come so far is negative for India

 G S Madhusudan

So my advice, stay out of all of those agreements.

 G S Madhusudan

But WTO for me in the IT

 G S Madhusudan

Segment is a, uh

 G S Madhusudan

It's a waste of time, yeah, and see you should have

 G S Madhusudan

High tariffs on all of that I agree right, kind of high customs duties.

 G S Madhusudan

But we kind of go overboard in the sense that we need to have alliances and relationships for us to thrive.

 G S Madhusudan

But that's just me talking.

 G S Madhusudan

I prefer to stand on my own two

 G S Madhusudan

Shoes without help from anybody else.

 G S Madhusudan

India can do the same 

 G S Madhusudan

I frankly don’t understand the

 G S Madhusudan

Need of the rationale for partnerships?

 G S Madhusudan

It holds us back.

Konark

I'll just comment to the second part of your initial statement about

Konark

You know

Konark

First is of course creating demand which is already there on the second is exporting stuff which is manufactured in India.

Konark

What do you say to those people who say that by focusing on the more mature nodes of the semiconductor ecosystem, we're sort of compromising our edge on this to be strategic tech part of the ecosystem

 G S Madhusudan

What strategic part?

 G S Madhusudan

I'm an advisor to the Ministry of Defense informally and stuff.

 G S Madhusudan

I know what

 G S Madhusudan

Strategy we have and stuff

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, when it comes to strategic tech, I trust people who actually design semiconductors for a living.

 G S Madhusudan

There is a decoupling between people's ability to actually design semiconductors and their desire to have a public opinion.

 G S Madhusudan

There is almost 0 overlap between the two.

 G S Madhusudan

So when people say things like that just ignore it.

 G S Madhusudan

Ask them if

 G S Madhusudan

How many chips they're designed in their life?

 G S Madhusudan

If the answer is less than five, just ignore the opinion.

 G S Madhusudan

Look, we need to crawl before we can walk and before we can run.

 G S Madhusudan

Running semiconductor plants needs a huge ecosystem.

 G S Madhusudan

Things like gases, purified water, high precision, cooling

 G S Madhusudan

So I have written enough notes. What I said was look you start 20 small fabs costing between 30 Million

 G S Madhusudan

To a billion and a half

 G S Madhusudan

 then you will create a whole cadre of fab engineers who

 G S Madhusudan

Know how to run a plant

 G S Madhusudan

Once you have that that will take about 5 to 8 years or so.

 G S Madhusudan

Slowly you can

 G S Madhusudan

Go on to

 G S Madhusudan

The bigger nodes, but seriously OK, I want to

 G S Madhusudan

Do A7 nanometer plant now Who's going to give you technology?

 G S Madhusudan

The PLA scheme has been

 G S Madhusudan

Announced how many people have volunteered with seven nanometer, even 12 nanometer technology no

 G S Madhusudan

We'll get 65 and 14 stuff

 G S Madhusudan

Look at the consumption

 G S Madhusudan

Of what is getting consumed in the world just not in India.

 G S Madhusudan

Oh every fan, every air conditioner, every washing machine.

 G S Madhusudan

Uh, and what's called the DC motor now, right for energy efficiency, right?

 G S Madhusudan

You've got these BLDC fans which are coming.

 G S Madhusudan

One manufacturer I know alone does support 7 Lakh fans is probably hitting 

 G S Madhusudan

like a Million fans a month each of them requires a processor.

 G S Madhusudan

XUV700 has between, I don't know, between 60 to

 G S Madhusudan

170 processors, each mirror has got one tiny little processor

 G S Madhusudan

Running there, right?

 G S Madhusudan

There's a huge demand of old generation parts that is needed.

 G S Madhusudan

In fact, I jokingly suggested to Matey that you should penalize somebody if they come with a 7 nanometer or 12 nanometer.

 G S Madhusudan

Right? Please focus on 180, 90, 65, 40

 G S Madhusudan

Along with gallium nitride for RF and all that.

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, forget the big semiconductor.

 G S Madhusudan

 I need power converters for motor starters

 G S Madhusudan

You know how many motors we make in the world

 G S Madhusudan

India can be

 G S Madhusudan

One of the leading suppliers of electric motors on the planet, rightCoimbatore for example

 G S Madhusudan

Is a leading motor supplier

 G S Madhusudan

That stuff right that requires power electronics.

 G S Madhusudan

It's a bulk electronics and stuff that also requires motor controller chips and all that.

 G S Madhusudan

There are huge volumes to be, uh

 G S Madhusudan

You're not going to get a 7 nanometers all nice.

 G S Madhusudan

Saying we need strategic Tech somebody 'cause there are only three guys on the planet with seven nanometer tech

 G S Madhusudan

There is Samsung, there is TSMC

 G S Madhusudan

And there’s Intel.

 G S Madhusudan

As far as I know, in my conversations with all of them in over the past month or so, none of them are waiting in a line to hand over their tech to us.

 G S Madhusudan

So keep dreaming

 G S Madhusudan

Or we can get practical and get fabs running 

Konark

So the obvious implication of this, as you mentioned earlier, is also to focus on the more mature nodes and Mr. Madhusudan a conversation I've had with you earlier as well. You’ve said focusing on the 70 nanometer range in the 45 to 70 nanometer range.

 G S Madhusudan

Yeah, for basically 180, 90, 64 and 40

 G S Madhusudan

Four important notes.

Konark

OK, so I just want to, you know, take a deep dive into a recent piece of legislation which was covered more extensively by the media, which is the passage of the US Chips Act.

Konark

But just a few days back when the US Congress, so one of the provisions in that essentially forbids the companies who are the beneficiaries of.

Konark

Any you know?

Konark

Funding from the government to

Konark

Expand any facility in China which is basically below 28 nanometers, but it allows them at the same time significantly, but it allows them as to sort of, you know, continue expanding production in the above 28 nanometer range.

Konark

Does this make India's task more tougher there was this  belief earlier that this decoupling of the technical systems would have would essentially benefit India?

Konark

But given the given that the legislation essentially says that no, you know China will be a location where these enterprises can indeed pursue the manufacturing of more mature nodes.

Konark

Does this make the competition for India more stiff?

 G S Madhusudan

It does see this is what I'm saying, right?

 G S Madhusudan

If you've got a thriving local industry, you can.

 G S Madhusudan

Afford to ignore all of this.

 G S Madhusudan

When it comes to foreign policy, the Chinese Government actually invites me every year for a keynote address.

 G S Madhusudan

So I don't know why, but they call me.

 G S Madhusudan

I go there, they treat me very nicely and stuff

 G S Madhusudan

I've been dealing with China.

 G S Madhusudan

For more than two decades.

 G S Madhusudan

Good stuff, lots of friends over there, but mostly Taiwanese Americans.

 G S Madhusudan

Many Chinese are remotely, but we know the industry there pretty well.

 G S Madhusudan

Because I’m in the sector right

 G S Madhusudan

But even after two and a half

 G S Madhusudan

Decades I can't figure.

 G S Madhusudan

Them out.

 G S Madhusudan

Uh, my standard policy with China.

 G S Madhusudan

Is just ignore it.

 G S Madhusudan

Just if you got a.

 G S Madhusudan

Map in your thing just.

 G S Madhusudan

Like remove it from the map, and it's not positive or negative.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not being.

 G S Madhusudan

Negative about China?

 G S Madhusudan

And stuff right?

 G S Madhusudan

Just just pretend it doesn't.

 G S Madhusudan

Exist and do your own thing.

 G S Madhusudan

And stop getting worried about what the American policy is with German policies. With the Taiwanese policies in Japanese policy, we have 1.4 billion people.

 G S Madhusudan

With The right amount.

 G S Madhusudan

Of local consumption we can call the shots.

 G S Madhusudan

We should look at what is pragmatic and focus on that.

 G S Madhusudan

China simply doesn't.

 G S Madhusudan

figure on our radar we.

 G S Madhusudan

Don't even think about it.

 G S Madhusudan

Can we export to China?

 G S Madhusudan

Probably not.

 G S Madhusudan

They have a local thriving industry.

 G S Madhusudan

There's nothing much we can do over there, but.

 G S Madhusudan

Engagement with China can happen.

 G S Madhusudan

Only if the Chinese want to engage us, right?

 G S Madhusudan

Like it's, it's always been one sided.

 G S Madhusudan

They need to respect us even when.

 G S Madhusudan

They respect us, probably take another 500 

 G S Madhusudan

1000 years or so.

 G S Madhusudan

Then we can engage with that, but in the interim, like in the next 20-30 years, we should.

 G S Madhusudan

Focus on the local market.

 G S Madhusudan

80% local market 20-30% export.

 G S Madhusudan

I tell you semiconductors when you actually sell them.

 G S Madhusudan

Just go to see.

 G S Madhusudan

When you buy chips, especially low end chips.

 G S Madhusudan

That you put in fans, motors and.

 G S Madhusudan

All of that.

 G S Madhusudan

Invariably you go.

 G S Madhusudan

To NXP, which.

 G S Madhusudan

Is X Phillips, Motorola or two taxes and Smiths?

 G S Madhusudan

Why excellent data sheets?

 G S Madhusudan

Good manuals.

 G S Madhusudan

Proper documentation, good field application support.

 G S Madhusudan

You write to them.

 G S Madhusudan

They'll give you samples.

 G S Madhusudan

Easy parts availability.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, the fact that the product.

 G S Madhusudan

Is world class is almost secondary?

 G S Madhusudan

It's the people based, so semiconductor when it's customer facing.

 G S Madhusudan

Inherently it's a services opportunity.

 G S Madhusudan

It's not just a manufacturing opportunity.

 G S Madhusudan

We miss out on.

 G S Madhusudan

That and because.

 

It's a services.

 G S Madhusudan

Opportunity we can run rings around China.

 G S Madhusudan

Nobody in their right mind would go.

 G S Madhusudan

Buy a chip from China if you want.

 G S Madhusudan

To experiment with it, right?

 G S Madhusudan

There will be.

 G S Madhusudan

Great chips, I know.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not downplaying the Chinese, but they're not really known for providing great manuals providing good 24/7 customer support.

 G S Madhusudan

Having local field application support officers and.

 G S Madhusudan

All of that, right?

 G S Madhusudan

So semiconductors Is inherently a customer facing function.

 G S Madhusudan

We ignore that aspect of it.

 G S Madhusudan

At our own peril, The thing is.

 G S Madhusudan

Just some mass manufacturing thing that you do and.

 G S Madhusudan

Magically itself, so it doesn't.

 G S Madhusudan

Sales and support is a major major part of the semiconductor industry and the guys who succeed in the market are the people who.

 G S Madhusudan

Get the support and services right.

 G S Madhusudan

It's it's our opportunity to blow.

 G S Madhusudan

India can become the number one.

 G S Madhusudan

Supplier of low cost semi conductors to the world.

 G S Madhusudan

Very very easily.

 G S Madhusudan

If you put a mind to it.

Konark

Right?

 G S Madhusudan

It's our battle to lose

 

Right?

Konark

I'll just pick up on that thread.

Konark

And we spoke about how India?

Konark

Can sort of complement its?

Konark

I think design and fabrication ecosystem with the services component as well.

Konark

Do you think this has been tackled and addressed in the recent policies of the government?

Konark

Has there been a focus on sort of augmenting the services ecosystem?

Konark

I mean we have the chips to start up scheme which is focusing

Konark

on training 83,000 people or so, but that's mostly engineering side. There is not much of a focus on the service side, so do you think that was?

 G S Madhusudan

There isn't.

 G S Madhusudan

There isn't any in.

 G S Madhusudan

Fact there's no focus on.

 G S Madhusudan

The product side itself correct?

 G S Madhusudan

So among the.

 G S Madhusudan

Chips that we're doing.

 G S Madhusudan

One of the things.

 G S Madhusudan

That InCode has done is actually.

 G S Madhusudan

Help bring together all the intellectual property suppliers in India.

 G S Madhusudan

So when we.

 G S Madhusudan

we have our first customer and the unique thing is it's a simple chip, not state-of-theart.They are like 150-200

 G S Madhusudan

megahertz process that anybody can do right like 20 countries in the world.

 G S Madhusudan

Can do it what

 G S Madhusudan

Is unique about it is that every intellectual property in that

 G S Madhusudan

Chip comes from India.

 G S Madhusudan

We're not using anything from outside, correct

 G S Madhusudan

So the government really needs to have a thrust on how do you create product companies?

 G S Madhusudan

What's the?

 G S Madhusudan

Help they need.

 G S Madhusudan

We need things like certification labs.

 G S Madhusudan

We need packaging units and all of that right.

 G S Madhusudan

The whole product development lifecycle is what is missing

 G S Madhusudan

Like I said, in a $10 chip the fab cost is only buck and a half or two 

 G S Madhusudan

The rest of it.

 G S Madhusudan

Is what India needs to have.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, for example, auto qualification. We're one of the world's leading auto manufacturers, right? So I make.

 G S Madhusudan

An automotive chip, how do I qualify it?

 G S Madhusudan

Reliability testing otherwise Mahindra or.

 G S Madhusudan

Tata won't buy it.

 G S Madhusudan

Correct, I lack the testing.

 G S Madhusudan

Infrastructure to qualify for auto mode.

 G S Madhusudan

Similarly, other certification, the whole bunch of things.

 G S Madhusudan

That need to happen.

 G S Madhusudan

So I'm not saying.

 G S Madhusudan

The government focus is wrong, but there are a.

 G S Madhusudan

Lot of other things that need to happen before.

 G S Madhusudan

We can become a viable semiconductor product country.

 

 G S Madhusudan

See, we can't just be a.

 G S Madhusudan

Low cost supplier to the world, right?

 G S Madhusudan

The thrust should be.

 G S Madhusudan

If you buy a chip on the planet.

 G S Madhusudan

Chances are it comes out of India.

 G S Madhusudan

Conceptualized, created, manufactured in India with.

 G S Madhusudan

0 support from any place on the planet except foundries

 G S Madhusudan

Easily can happen in the

 G S Madhusudan

Next five years.

 G S Madhusudan

Not a problem at all.

Konark

But that that is quite the contrarian view.

Konark

Mr madhusudan.

Konark

You know, given all that we have read in the press about, you know partnerships, and given all that.

Konark

We've read about how you can only succeed in one state of the ecosystem if you try to do too many things at the same time, it will probably not succeed, but I mean, we are clearly laid out, you know a road map here, in the sense that.

Konark

You’ve identified certain things the government can do, indeed, to set the ball rolling in this front

Konark

So yeah, the point is well.

Konark

Taken in in an.

Konark

Earlier conversation with you again you had.

Konark

Sort of spoken about.

Konark

You know that.

Konark

There needs to be a concrete goal in terms of, you know, a production target or something you want to elaborate more on that.

 G S Madhusudan

Yeah, see I'm I'm I'm a.

 G S Madhusudan

Chap who believes in having.

 G S Madhusudan

Taking a small task.

 G S Madhusudan

1st and.

 G S Madhusudan

Executing it to perfection correct?

 G S Madhusudan

So like I said, you take one thing you.

 

Just take a.

 G S Madhusudan

Motor controller chip and say an electricity meter chip right?

 G S Madhusudan

These things sell in tens of millions every year in India, so the volumes are guaranteed.

 G S Madhusudan

So I wish the government would say, OK, we'll just.

 G S Madhusudan

Take 2 chips, one that.

 G S Madhusudan

Goes into fans and AC's.

 G S Madhusudan

And refrigerators and one.

 G S Madhusudan

That goes into electricity meters.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, so demand for both of these is guaranteed we I think our.

 G S Madhusudan

Demand is what?

 G S Madhusudan

That's 25 crore electricity meters

 G S Madhusudan

Or something like that, like huge, right?

 G S Madhusudan

So we actually made a list of five chips.

 G S Madhusudan

Each chip will probably.

 G S Madhusudan

Cost you anywhere from 50 Crores to 100

 G S Madhusudan

Crores to design, manufacture, bring into production.

 G S Madhusudan

So you're talking about an overall investment of.

 G S Madhusudan

500 Crores which is nothing

 G S Madhusudan

If you invest this with 500 Crores essentially you.

 G S Madhusudan

Can start selling.

 G S Madhusudan

Something between 20 million to 100.

 G S Madhusudan

Million chips in India, right?

 G S Madhusudan

All of these five chips you pick two.

 G S Madhusudan

And take it through the cycle that.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm talking.

 G S Madhusudan

About and see what?

 G S Madhusudan

Is lagging in India?

 G S Madhusudan

Right, you make a success of these two chips.

 G S Madhusudan

Then the confidence builds itself correct

 G S Madhusudan

While I'm talking, it's still all talk

 G S Madhusudan

There still doesn't produce any chips in volumes right to get to the stage where we can trust ourselves you.

 G S Madhusudan

Need to take one chip

 G S Madhusudan

take it to production.

 G S Madhusudan

I know all the wrinkles and then.

 G S Madhusudan

You know what parts?

 G S Madhusudan

Of the ecosystem are lagging in India.

 G S Madhusudan

Then you use government schemes to.

 G S Madhusudan

Fill the gaps correct?

 G S Madhusudan

So we need to do.

 G S Madhusudan

A dry run with one chip get into.

 G S Madhusudan

Volume then?

 G S Madhusudan

Do the second chip.

 G S Madhusudan

Once you have done two chips then you multiply.

 G S Madhusudan

Say we'll do five more right?

 G S Madhusudan

So you gradually build it.

 G S Madhusudan

And you start with the lower end of the chain

 

I think.

 G S Madhusudan

The chips can be cost.

 G S Madhusudan

Effective if they're.

 G S Madhusudan

Not OK, give a 5-10%.

 G S Madhusudan

Subsidy or something?

 G S Madhusudan

So typically, for example, electricity meter chips sell for about $0.90 in the market right? Which goes into single Phase meters

 G S Madhusudan

Three phase meter chips I think are a $1.20 or something

 G S Madhusudan

I'm talking dollars.

 G S Madhusudan

So if the Indian chip say.

 G S Madhusudan

10-15 cents more. That's like 7-8 rupees. That's OK a meter costs

 G S Madhusudan

1500 rupees or something, right? You can easily say a subsidy of ₹40 per chip. Then you get a volume of million.

 G S Madhusudan

After that we won't give you subsidies.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, we need to get that. So we need to have a razor sharp focus on saying OK by 2025 I will have two Indian chips selling a volume of.

 G S Madhusudan

10 million a piece a year

 G S Madhusudan

Very hard concrete goal.

 G S Madhusudan

Don't get distracted with anything else.

 G S Madhusudan

Take it through to fruition and once Indian design chips are being manufactured in millions then everybody gets confident that we can.

 G S Madhusudan

Do other things.

 G S Madhusudan

Otherwise, we are in this endless talk cycle, right

 G S Madhusudan

This there is no difference from a TV talk show except the talk show their tests will be acerbic.

 G S Madhusudan

Uh, our semiconductor conversations are more polite.

 G S Madhusudan

But in terms of.

 G S Madhusudan

Lack of any useful information.

 G S Madhusudan

Both are identical.

 G S Madhusudan

Just keep talking, talking, talking right.

 G S Madhusudan

I Want to see chips?

 G S Madhusudan

The government is doing.

 G S Madhusudan

See, I'm not, I'm not.

 G S Madhusudan

Blaming the government.

 G S Madhusudan

Here, right?

 G S Madhusudan

You can't expect the government to create a semiconductor industry all by itself, commented, giving enough incentive

 G S Madhusudan

It’s up to the private sector.

 G S Madhusudan

To step up to the plate.

 G S Madhusudan

And see what can be done.

Correct?

 G S Madhusudan

That it has to be.

 G S Madhusudan

A partnership it can't be a

 G S Madhusuda

 Government does everything the government does have to play a role.

 G S Madhusudan

If you look at how the semiconductor industry award in all countries, the government, U.S. government, Taiwanese government, Japanese Government.

 G S Madhusudan

There is a significant role.

 G S Madhusudan

But when they started.

 G S Madhusudan

It was very nascent, so that degree.

 G S Madhusudan

Of government support is.

 G S Madhusudan

Needed, that's not the case now.

 G S Madhusudan

But the government can help, I guess in.

 G S Madhusudan

Giving Chip mandates, for example, if.

 G S Madhusudan

They say that OK for electricity meters we will.

 G S Madhusudan

Favor Indian chips only.

 G S Madhusudan

Then the private sector will take the financial risk

 G S Madhusudan

Come on, don't tell me we don't have enough money in the country that we.

 G S Madhusudan

Can't take a 70 Crore bet on one chip.

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, if I.

 G S Madhusudan

Look out my.

 G S Madhusudan

Window in the streets here I'm.

 G S Madhusudan

Probably seeing the 3-4.

 G S Madhusudan

Probably about.

 G S Madhusudan

Seven crores worth of cars

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, there's one.

 G S Madhusudan

Maybach parked outside, I think.

 G S Madhusudan

The neighbor has some money, there's one Jaguar.

 G S Madhusudan

1E class Mercedes I think there’s an S class over there

 G S Madhusudan

It it adds up, right so?

 G S Madhusudan

I go to the window I see like.

 G S Madhusudan

About 10-15 crores worth of cars

 G S Madhusudan

so that's obviously there's money available to burn.

 G S Madhusudan

70 Crores to take a gamble on.

 G S Madhusudan

A single chip which can sell in volumes.

Konark

Right, so do you think that the government's incentive structure is a bit lopsided? Should we be giving more incentives to companies which are focused more on the mature node segment or?

Konark

Should we be?

 G S Madhusudan

Terms of the fab policy I have told Matey, forget about 7

 G S Madhusudan

Nanometers focus on the other ones.

 G S Madhusudan

I can understand where they're coming from, but don't read too much into it.

 G S Madhusudan

I I'm not a firm believer in too much of government incentives, right?

 G S Madhusudan

I would rather the government works on creating demand.

 G S Madhusudan

We need a pull instead.

 G S Madhusudan

Of a push, correct?

 

See if I as.

 G S Madhusudan

A private sector guy.

 G S Madhusudan

I know there is.

 G S Madhusudan

A market for 50 million power meter chips I.

 G S Madhusudan

Will go ahead and make the investment.

 G S Madhusudan

So there needs.

 G S Madhusudan

To be a bit of a demand pull.

 G S Madhusudan

In terms of mandates and stuff, discussions are.

 G S Madhusudan

Happening, I'm hoping some government policy will come.

 G S Madhusudan

By the end of the year or so.

Konark

I think for the larger part of this podcast you have thus far focused on the fabrication part.

Konark

Let's move over to the design ecosystem for a bit, and if you can just briefly have your thoughts on the DLI scheme which has come out.

Konark

I mean, it's been appreciated in various quarters, but there are some concerns that the amount being promised under the scheme is not sufficient enough and what to do?

Konark

When the money dries up, you know we'll have any VC firm come and essentially pick up the tab and basically carry the funding.

Konark

Forward, or you know there's some money which is being promised under the scheme.

Konark

Is it something which is reimbursed, or is it something that's promised upfront so you know we'll be happy?

 

I I think it's partly this.

 G S Madhusudan

Scheme is also being redone or something is what I heard.

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, we also plan to apply for it, but we've not applied

 G S Madhusudan

Because we just.

 G S Madhusudan

Wanted to get a few things right before.

 G S Madhusudan

We applied for a.

 G S Madhusudan

See, DLI is one component of it.

 G S Madhusudan

One of

 G S Madhusudan

The concerns I have.

 G S Madhusudan

And I've told Michael also.

 G S Madhusudan

How do you I wish?

 G S Madhusudan

The DLI scheme a little more focus in terms.

 G S Madhusudan

Of see whenever.

 G S Madhusudan

Subsidies are given.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not an anti subsidy.

 G S Madhusudan

Or I'm probably slightly more pro subsidy, but I prefer focused subsidies and I would like to have measurable outcomes when it comes to subsidies and grants, right?

 G S Madhusudan

There is nothing wrong with the subsidy per say.

 G S Madhusudan

Provided you have.

 G S Madhusudan

Some goal in.

 G S Madhusudan

Mind and you at least achieve 80.

 G S Madhusudan

Percent of that goal

 G S Madhusudan

So what is the?

 G S Madhusudan

Incentive for DLI what is?

 G S Madhusudan

It that you hope? Ok

 G S Madhusudan

You spend I think DLI was some 500 Crores or two lots of 500-1000 Crores or whatever

 G S Madhusudan

Let's assume 1000 Crores, right? You've spent 1000 Crores. It's not a huge amount of money, it's it's amount of money that's worthwhile experimenting. You spend that.

 G S Madhusudan

1000 Crores

 G S Madhusudan

How do you measure?

 G S Madhusudan

The success of that 1000 Crores.

 G S Madhusudan

What are success metrics what?

 G S Madhusudan

Is it that you want to achieve?

 G S Madhusudan

Do you want to create intellectual property?

 G S Madhusudan

You want people creating Ethernet controllers so you know.

 G S Madhusudan

The components that go into.

 

A chip, but.

 G S Madhusudan

We already have IP suppliers in India who.

 G S Madhusudan

Are not able to set

 G S Madhusudan

Correct? Or are you looking for people who are creating SOCs?

 G S Madhusudan

But if somebody created creates a chip?

 G S Madhusudan

How is he going to sell it?

 G S Madhusudan

OK, you give 50 crores and he designs

 G S Madhusudan

A successful chip

 G S Madhusudan

The problem in India?

 G S Madhusudan

Is sales and marketing in terms of conceptualizing the.

 G S Madhusudan

Part so I go to Matey.

 G S Madhusudan

And say OK, this is my DLI aspect

G S Madhusudan

Who checks whether that's a viable product in the market?

 G S Madhusudan

Matey recognizes that

 G S Madhusudan

 they're actually they're actually going.

 G S Madhusudan

They're taking their own pace in the DLI, which is good.

 G S Madhusudan

I appreciate the fact they're not rushing through with.

 G S Madhusudan

It in trying to figure out how can we spend the money, but obviously somebody.

 G S Madhusudan

Is going to ask.

 G S Madhusudan

What happened after spending that money?

 G S Madhusudan

Matey is very cognizant of that it is not an easy question to answer.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not claiming how.

 G S Madhusudan

The answers my suggestion was have a far.

 G S Madhusudan

More focused DLI scheme.

 G S Madhusudan

It says OK, Ideally,

 G S Madhusudan

I believe If I want to advise.

 G S Madhusudan

I would say have DLI for specific parts.

 G S Madhusudan

OK, have a DLI for energy meters have DLI for point of sale template chips right have a DLI 

 G S Madhusudan

For a security chip.

 G S Madhusudan

There you can kind of measure the outcome and more importantly, the output can be used into products.

 G S Madhusudan

So, uh, I think if DLI has more of a product focus in terms of products can get used both locally and abroad, then the government will get the bang for the buck.

 G S Madhusudan

Otherwise, you'll still.

 G S Madhusudan

Get returns, but it will be.

 G S Madhusudan

More long term and fuzzy.

 G S Madhusudan

And with the CAG, ask questions saying hey.

 G S Madhusudan

We spend 2000 Crores, What happened?

 G S Madhusudan

It's it's a very tough.

 G S Madhusudan

One to answer, I'm not.

 G S Madhusudan

Saying CAG is wrong or Matey is wrong, right?

 G S Madhusudan

If you don't have well defined goals and saying it's a long-term goal, that is fine.

 G S Madhusudan

That's another way.

 G S Madhusudan

Of looking at it.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, but those kind of.

 G S Madhusudan

Investments you don't look at ROI.

 G S Madhusudan

You basically say, OK, I'll.

 G S Madhusudan

Spend 1000 crores to create an ecosystem and.

 G S Madhusudan

As long as.

 G S Madhusudan

The ecosystem gets created.

 G S Madhusudan

You should be happy with it.

 G S Madhusudan

So there the outcome is measured by.

 G S Madhusudan

Number of design engineers out.

 G S Madhusudan

Right whereas a more focused DLI will measure its success by.

 G S Madhusudan

The number of chips that.

 G S Madhusudan

Got  created neither is wrong it, but you need to decide what is the outcome you desire by spending that 500-1000 Crores

 G S Madhusudan

So there's no right or wrong answer, I'm just talking about measuring success metrics.

Konark

This brings me to my next question, which is sort of related to this topic of chip design.

Konark

You know, the export controls initiated a couple of years back from the.

Konark

USside.

Konark

have essentially led to the school of thought in China that we.

Konark

Should leapfrog it.

Konark

Because there is no way we can.

Konark

Possibly catch up with next 7 nanometer chips.

Konark

In the next 5-6 years. So there's talk about you know and Chinese companies indeed have sort of, you know, been quite dominant in the RISC-V foundation. I think I was going to get to that point do.

Konark

You see the rich pipeline.

 G S Madhusudan

Yeah, that means I.

 G S Madhusudan

Have been dominant but I have not seen too many Chinese chips come out.

 G S Madhusudan

Yet and.

 G S Madhusudan

See forget about RISC-V right, ARM Has been there for donkeys years correct? ARMS  came in 1985 by the way.

 G S Madhusudan

ARMs started as a BBC contest so it 

 G S Madhusudan

Have been there for a long time.

 G S Madhusudan

Now you have a.

 G S Madhusudan

Lot of ARM chips out of China.

 G S Madhusudan

And stuff, but the dominant.

 G S Madhusudan

Players are still Western players.

 G S Madhusudan

I keep saying chips are about the services.

 G S Madhusudan

That you offer.

 G S Madhusudan

After you manufacture the chip, it's about the manuals.

 G S Madhusudan

It's about the Technical Support.

 G S Madhusudan

It's about having.

 G S Madhusudan

A call center which properly answers your design questions.

 G S Madhusudan

See, you're designing a UPS.

 G S Madhusudan

You put a chip in there.

 G S Madhusudan

It's not working as it's supposed to be you.

 G S Madhusudan

Ask for the data sheet

 G S Madhusudan

You've got a production deadline.

 G S Madhusudan

You've got customers waiting.

 G S Madhusudan

You need the help from the manufacturer to sort.

 G S Madhusudan

Out the problem.

 G S Madhusudan

Right, so if you're buying a chip, say for.

 G S Madhusudan

₹250 from.

 G S Madhusudan

A western vendor.

 G S Madhusudan

And the Chinese guy gives you 150. Yes, you save ₹100.

 G S Madhusudan

The UPS is selling for 10,000 bucks.

 G S Madhusudan

If you hold up.

 G S Madhusudan

Production you lose a lot more.

 G S Madhusudan

So saving that 50 bucks is not.

 G S Madhusudan

Worth it?

 G S Madhusudan

If you don't get good support, correct.

 G S Madhusudan

So if.

 G S Madhusudan

Semiconductors are not this monolithic.

 G S Madhusudan

Thing that you you put engineers into it.

 G S Madhusudan

You can leave from right?

 G S Madhusudan

Chip design manufacturing.

 G S Madhusudan

Selling is a culture.

 G S Madhusudan

It is that culture we.

 G S Madhusudan

Need to imbibe from the West, not the technology.

Konark

There are still some benefits which are heavily doubted of the RISC-V architecture. Basically it uses you know for performing similar functions compared to X86 and ARM. It basically uses the less memory. It's open, close.

 

Oh no no no no no.

 

No no please.

 G S Madhusudan

Don't buy, I'm.

 G S Madhusudan

Here one of the when.

 G S Madhusudan

I was at ID.

 G S Madhusudan

There are the founding members.

 G S Madhusudan

Of the consortium.

 G S Madhusudan

All instruction set architectures are similar.

 G S Madhusudan

The efficiency comes more from how you architect the chip rather than the ISA.

 G S Madhusudan

What RISC-V gives is a nice clean business model where you don't have to pay royalties or there’s no control

 G S Madhusudan

RISC-V is more.

 G S Madhusudan

About a business model.

 G S Madhusudan

Than technology.

 G S Madhusudan

It is more democratic.

 G S Madhusudan

So RISC-V is a cultural change in.

 G S Madhusudan

A business change.

 G S Madhusudan

It is not.

 G S Madhusudan

A technology breakthrough

 G S Madhusudan

You really need to get that, so, uh.

 G S Madhusudan

RISC-V chip will not be more.

 G S Madhusudan

Efficient than an ARM chip

 G S Madhusudan

They'll all be identical.

 G S Madhusudan

It will not consume less memory, it will.

 G S Madhusudan

Not run faster it.

 G S Madhusudan

Will run at the same speed as the ARM

 G S Madhusudan

It Will consume the same amount of memory.

 G S Madhusudan

Give and take a little here and there.

 G S Madhusudan

The efficiency of the chip comes more in how a chip is architected, which has got nothing

 G S Madhusudan

To do with the ISA

 G S Madhusudan

So just going on to the RISC-V will not give you any benefit other than the fact that you don't have to pay royalty.

 G S Madhusudan

You don't have to.

 G S Madhusudan

Sign agreements,  and all that you can do.

 G S Madhusudan

Whatever you want it.

 G S Madhusudan

Simply gives you more flexibility, but.

 G S Madhusudan

You need a culture of designing.

 G S Madhusudan

Products to leverage that flexibility correct?

 G S Madhusudan

So unless we have a culture of conceptualizing and creating products India can't.

 G S Madhusudan

Leverage RISC-V

 G S Madhusudan

We’ll simply provide the cheap manpower.

 G S Madhusudan

The rest of the World to create RISC-V chips, but the product sensors will be conceptualized and created by somebody else.

 G S Madhusudan

I don't want that to happen right, I want.

 G S Madhusudan

The products come out of India

 G S Madhusudan

Well, so ideally if you want to give incentive, I would say.

 G S Madhusudan

Give money to a bunch of IIM’s and other MBA institutions.

 G S Madhusudan

Give a stipend of two

 G S Madhusudan

Lakhs a month.

 G S Madhusudan

And start creating.

 G S Madhusudan

Product managers in the semiconductor sector.

 G S Madhusudan

See, suppose OK you want to create a chip that will go into mobile phones.

 G S Madhusudan

You need to figure out OK which part of the mobile phone?

 G S Madhusudan

Do I target?

 G S Madhusudan

What price point do I?

 G S Madhusudan

Target there are.

 G S Madhusudan

Four existing suppliers in the market.

 G S Madhusudan

How do I?

 G S Madhusudan

Leapfrog over there.

 G S Madhusudan

What does my?

 G S Madhusudan

Supply chain going to be be.

 G S Madhusudan

What advantage do I?

 G S Madhusudan

Have over the existing.

 G S Madhusudan

How do I convince the customer solutions?

 G S Madhusudan

From his chip with my chip, correct?

 G S Madhusudan

These are the questions you need to answer if you want.

 G S Madhusudan

To have a thriving local products.

 G S Madhusudan

Designing the part is the easy portion.

 G S Madhusudan

Selling it to a customer is a tough one.

Konark

So I mean, so far the conversation is very straightforward.

Konark

It seems to be that you know we don't need fancy fabs, we need more of you know a dedication to a particular product segment and sort of have a policy laying out the road map for people to participate.

Konark

In that we do not necessarily need RISC-V

Konark

But what we need is people who can sort of utilize it better in terms of their engineering talent and.

Konark

Even regarding the engineering talent, it needs to be more holistic with a focus on fund raising and you know, product management and marketing and all that.

 G S Madhusudan

No, we don't need RISC-V

 G S Madhusudan

See RISC-V gives us a business advantage, right?

 G S Madhusudan

I am saying it doesn't give you a technical advantage compared to ARM

 G S Madhusudan

It definitely gives India and China a business advantage because you're not beholden to anybody.

 G S Madhusudan

Suppose you're doing a particular.

 G S Madhusudan

Part say for a.

 G S Madhusudan

Google Home, like speaker, right?

 G S Madhusudan

And you come up with an innovation where you add 2 instructions to improve voice recognition quality.

 G S Madhusudan

That is your intellectual property.

 G S Madhusudan

So an Indian company building an SoC for a Google Home type speaker can rapidly innovate without paying royalties or being beholden to somebody else.

 G S Madhusudan

So RISC-Vis.

 G S Madhusudan

Very crucial to India’s success.

 G S Madhusudan

But please look at it from the intellectual flexibility and the business flexibility it gives you.

 G S Madhusudan

Not necessarily a technology or business technology advantage.

Konark

I see and you also spoke at length earlier in the podcast about, you know, sort of fighting patent battles in the Delhi High Court as well.

Konark

So is there any correlation with that observation and the fact that this pipe basically is royalty free?

 G S Madhusudan

It is royalty-free, also RISC-V

 G S Madhusudan

Companies typically don't assert patents there.

 G S Madhusudan

Is also patent pool kind.

 G S Madhusudan

Of stuff that is getting created to help RISC-V companies file patents

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, that's why companies do file patents, but they.

 G S Madhusudan

Typically use it.

 G S Madhusudan

Defensive, fortunately, all the biggies who used to file patent wars have stopped very unusually Microsoft and Cisco, which used to assert.

 G S Madhusudan

Patents and take people to courts have joined forces to create a patent free video standard, right? Talk about a 180 degree turn.

 G S Madhusudan

Because I said that look if this is for all the video encoding, they're saying if everybody has to pay patent  it's very tough to watch videos and browsers and stuff, right?

 G S Madhusudan

I've written an article in Hindu.

 G S Madhusudan

I am a avowedly anti patent even if you file a patent

 G S Madhusudan

And it should be defensive.

 G S Madhusudan

See patents existed not as a fundamental right, but as a government policy to accelerate innovation.

 G S Madhusudan

Open source technology and open standards.

 G S Madhusudan

Let’s say

 G S Madhusudan

If I have proven.

 G S Madhusudan

That you don't need to incentivize innovation with patents.

 G S Madhusudan

Patents are a means.

 G S Madhusudan

To an end.

 

If you can.

 G S Madhusudan

Have innovation without patents.

 G S Madhusudan

Why should you give a privilege to company?

 G S Madhusudan

Especially in software.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm talking only in the context of software patents and mathematical algorithm type patents, right?

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not generalizing in terms of medicines and mechanical and stuff.

 G S Madhusudan

That's an entirely different field line.

 G S Madhusudan

I'm talking only narrowly about software and software related fields

Konark

I think I'll again harp back to the issue of partnerships, so this is something we had earlier spoken  spoken about as well, which is, you know, the issue of prototypes we had mentioned.

Konark

They're really expensive, you know to secure, and maybe if there is a dollar partnership to begin with, we can probably start.

Konark

With you know TSMC

Konark

Or someone in Taiwan supplying it's.

Konark

We need maybe 100 prototypes and.

Konark

And the Indian ecosystem.

Konark

Sort of.

Konark

Takes it forward from.

Konark

There would you, would you get to.

 G S Madhusudan

But that's not a partnership.

 G S Madhusudan

That's a business arrangement, right?

 G S Madhusudan

I mean, if you.

 G S Madhusudan

Go to design 100 chips the government.

 G S Madhusudan

Can block capacity with TSMC and say that.

 G S Madhusudan

Hey, we'll give you.

 G S Madhusudan

Guaranteed 100 chips.

 G S Madhusudan

Whether you use it or not, and give me a reduced rate.

 G S Madhusudan

Fine beyond that, why would you think TSMC or Intel or anybody will come to India with the sole purpose of improving the Indian ecosystem?

 G S Madhusudan

No, I'm not saying they're wrong.

 G S Madhusudan

They they are beholden to their shareholders, right?

 G S Madhusudan

They have to show a return of equity on their shallow investment.

 G S Madhusudan

It is not their job to create a semiconductor industry in India.

 G S Madhusudan

That is our job.

 G S Madhusudan

They will help us.

 G S Madhusudan

There they are.

 G S Madhusudan

Excellent companies are good technology companies.

 G S Madhusudan

They're always willing for a good business.

 G S Madhusudan

Relationship, but that business relationship.

 G S Madhusudan

Has to make sense to them.

 G S Madhusudan

So we need to.

 G S Madhusudan

Say hey come do business in India because you benefit this way.

 

It's a capitalist.

 G S Madhusudan

Society, right?

 G S Madhusudan

They're not here for our benefit.

 G S Madhusudan

They're there for the benefit of their shareholders.

 G S Madhusudan

Nothing wrong.

 G S Madhusudan

With that that's.

 G S Madhusudan

How it should be?

 G S Madhusudan

I'm not criticizing any of them.

 G S Madhusudan

But we tend.

 G S Madhusudan

To get a little emotional about this.

 G S Madhusudan

I I have no idea why.

Konark

I think this ties in well with the point made earlier.

Konark

Also about deep taken strategic type, you know.

Konark

I mean, it's good to have it, but then it has to be profitable for the companies which seek to manufacture along those segments as well.

Konark

So the point is well taken, I think we're reaching the closer for allotted time, but I'll just end with this one question.

Konark

Mr madhusudan.

Konark

You've already mentioned at the beginning of this podcast that there should be.

Konark

Two things you know.

Konark

Creating an industry which has strong domestic demand and then exporting whatever is produced.

Konark

Overseas, but if there's any one overarching lesson you know after 30 years in the industry which you wish to sort of impart to Indian policymakers in the semiconductor ecosystem, or maybe even more than one, you know as many as you wish, what would be those key lessons?

 G S Madhusudan

No, just one you you please figure out how to get Indian companies to create world class product the entire cycle right from parts of the manufacturing.

 G S Madhusudan

Everything that you see in.

 G S Madhusudan

The world Apple phones.

 G S Madhusudan

So intel’s Evo laptops or LG OLED TV's or.

 G S Madhusudan

Hyundai EV cars and stuff.

 G S Madhusudan

They're all about products.

 G S Madhusudan

The world is about products and brands.

 G S Madhusudan

And if India needs to succeed, it needs to.

 G S Madhusudan

Create world class products.

 G S Madhusudan

It can be the.

 G S Madhusudan

Lower end of the spectrum.

 G S Madhusudan

You know what a big business rises in India?

 G S Madhusudan

That's as glamorous as commodity as you can get.

 G S Madhusudan

I know people who make hundreds of Crores out of selling rice.

 G S Madhusudan

There is a family that.

 G S Madhusudan

I knew which.

 G S Madhusudan

The gentleman fell ill

 G S Madhusudan

Unfortunately, he didn't make it.

 G S Madhusudan

But I think he was in the ICU.

 G S Madhusudan

For two years at apollo

 G S Madhusudan

And there were some commodity traders or.

 G S Madhusudan

Some kind of it's again, but they could they could afford.

 G S Madhusudan

It just trading commodities.

 G S Madhusudan

There's there's lots of money at the commodity end of the market, and similarly in semiconductors. It's not only the mobile phone chips and stuff that sell, it's also your little power converter chips. You know the little chip that go into your power adapter outside your 65 Watt adapters 100 watt adapters

 G S Madhusudan

Those are big volumes.

 G S Madhusudan

For every mobile phone that you buy, you.

 G S Madhusudan

Probably end up buying 3 adapters, correct?

 G S Madhusudan

All your volume volume that's the name.

 G S Madhusudan

Of the game in.

 G S Madhusudan

Semiconductors so.

Konark

So I guess the key take away if I can just put this in one particular phrase, it would be if you build it they will come.

Konark

If you build world class products, they will come.

Konark

You know you don't necessarily have to rely on partnerships trade while beneficial in the form of lower tariff barriers, would be welcome, but.

 G S Madhusudan

Here we go.

Konark

You know, I think.

Konark

If you show a proficiency for creating world class products, the partnership will follow and I think on that note.

Konark

We will end the podcast Mr.

Konark

Madhusudan and thank you so much for your time.

Konark

It was indeed a pleasure to have you over and we look forward to having further conversations with you down the line as well.

 G S Madhusudan

You're welcome.

Konark

We'll be back in two weeks with the new episode to make sure you don't miss it.

Konark

Be sure to subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher or wherever you get your podcasts from.

Konark

To learn more about our research and team you can visit us at carnegieindia.org. You can also visit us on social media on Twitter.

Konark

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Konark

Thank you for listening.

Konark

See you next time.