China has recently been in the news over Internet Espionage on defense and sensitive installations in India and USA. This has led to the high profile exit of Google from China.Recently a Canadian research organization revealed/alleged how Chinese govt backed hackers had broken into Indian embassy and government computers.This has made the Indian government wary of allowing Chinese equipment suppliers into India’s communication sector.Though both ZTE and Huawei’s equipment is much cheaper compared to Nokia Siemens,Alcatel and Ericsson , these companies face an uphill battler in India right now. With around 400 million users and 600 million to go , India is THE Telecom Market to be in from a demand point of view.Shows you how Chinese companies are disadvantaged due to their home country in different parts of the world .The Rio Tinto and Google cases reflect the increasing antagonism between China and Rest of the World.
Facing increased competition at home and government pressure to expand overseas, Chinese telecom equipment makers have been looking toward India. The country is already the biggest export market for China’s two leading phone gear manufacturers, Huawei Technologies and ZTE, and both companies have made India a top priority. “If [Indian] government policies are favorable,” ZTE India managing director D.K. Ghosh said on Apr. 14, “we will further scale up our investments.”
When it comes to China’s Big Two, though, India’s policies are hardly favorable. The government has sent letters to Indian phone companies saying they can’t buy equipment from Huawei, ZTE, and several other mainland companies due to security risks. In April, researchers reported that Chinese hackers had targeted Indian defense computers. And in December, India banned many Chinese cell phones, also because of security concerns, and imposed anti-dumping duties on transmission gear from Huawei and other vendors. Huawei says it’s committed to “the development of the Indian telecoms industry.” ZTE says it adheres to Indian law.
The new restrictions don’t apply only to the Chinese. An Israeli company and California-based U.T. Starcom (which does most of its manufacturing in China) were hit, too. Yet few analysts doubt that China is the main target of the restrictions. “The Indians are incredibly paranoid about China,” says David Zweig, a professor of politics at Hong Kong University of Science & Technology.
The tensions could be a problem for other Chinese tech companies. As India has grown to the world’s No. 2 cellular market in recent years, its imports of Chinese handsets have soared. Tencent, China’s top instant-messaging service, has invested in Indian Internet startups. And India is the third-largest operation (after China and the U.S.) for Alibaba.com, an online marketplace based in Hangzhou. An Alibaba spokeswoman says the company isn’t worried about the restrictions. Tencent declined to comment.
While India’s phone companies could buy equipment from Western suppliers, they would pay far more. So carriers are lobbying the government for a change—and hedging their bets, says Sanjeev Aga, managing director at Mumbai-based Idea Cellular. “A lot of companies are finding suppliers in India,” Aga says. Any resolution, though, may ultimately require talks between the two governments, says Kunal Bajaj, a partner with market research firm Analysys Mason. “There is going to be quite a bit of posturing between the two countries for some time,” he says
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[…] by the leaders of the two countries have signaled the desire to improve relations.However the Huawei and ZTE ban underscores the suspicions with which these countries view each […]
[…] policies have done nothing to improve the relations between the 2 countries.This caused India to virtually ban Huawei and ZTE from India’s lucrative telecom market.ZTE and Huawei ever since have been desperately lobbying to overturn this ban through various […]
[…] India’s private players like Tata Power,Reliance Power and others are in the process of setting up massive mega coal plants using supercritical boiler technology.While L&T and BHEL,the two Largest Capital Equipment Companies have won a lot of orders,the sheer scale of Demand requires Huge Imports as well.Low cost Chinese equipment providers like Shanghai Electric and Dongfang Electric have won almost half of the power equipment orders raising concerns amongst the Indian administrators.The relations between the 2 countries has always been testy with a major war being fought in 1962.Recently India banned Chinese telecom equipment providers Huawei and ZTE over Security Concerns. […]