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AI, Memory Chip Shortage & India’s Semiconductor Mission

General Studies Paper 3 – Science and Technology, Economy |
Source: The Hindu

1. What happened

Budget smartphones below ₹10,000–₹15,000 are becoming harder to find in India. The reason is a global memory chip shortage — driven not by any natural disaster, but by Artificial Intelligence swallowing up the world’s chip manufacturing capacity.

  • Memory chip (DRAM) prices have doubled since early 2025 — up 171% year-on-year.
  • Smartphone prices in India have risen 15–20% in the budget segment.
  • Global smartphone shipments are projected to fall by 12.9% in 2026.
  • India imports 100% of its memory chips — making it fully exposed to this global shock.

2. What is memflation — and why is AI causing it

HOW AI IS EATING THE WORLD’S MEMORY CHIPS

AI servers need 8–12x more memory than normal servers
Tech giants (Microsoft, Google, Meta) lock up chip supply with long-term contracts
Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron shift factories to AI chips (High Bandwidth Memory)
Consumer chips (smartphones, laptops) face severe shortage
Prices double — budget phones become unaffordable
Memflation = memory chip inflation.Think of it like this — a city has 10 flour mills. Suddenly, 3 of them switch to making specialty bread for luxury hotels at higher profit. Now ordinary bakeries cannot get enough flour — and bread prices rise for everyone.

High Bandwidth Memory (AI chips)

  • Used in Artificial Intelligence servers and data centres
  • Uses 23 times more wafer capacity than regular chips
  • Now consumes 23% of all chip factory space (was 5% in 2024)
  • Very high profit margin for chipmakers

Consumer DRAM and NAND (phone chips)

  • Used in smartphones, laptops, tablets
  • Lower profit margin — factories being converted away
  • Three companies control 95% of global supply — Samsung, SK Hynix, Micron
  • Shortage pushing prices up sharply

3. India’s response — the semiconductor mission

India launched the India Semiconductor Mission in December 2021 with a budget of ₹76,000 crore. It gives 50% financial support to companies building chip factories, testing facilities, and design centres in India.

10 projects have been approved with total investment of ₹1.6 lakh crore. Key ones:

KEY APPROVED PROJECTS UNDER INDIA SEMICONDUCTOR MISSION

Tata Electronics + PSMC (Taiwan) — Dholera, Gujarat

India’s first large semiconductor fab. Investment: ₹91,000 crore. Makes 28nm chips for cars, computing, and Artificial Intelligence. First chips expected: late 2026.

Micron Technology — Sanand, Gujarat

Assembly and testing facility for DRAM and NAND chips. Investment: ₹22,516 crore. Inaugurated February 28, 2026 — already operational.

Kaynes Semicon — Sanand, Gujarat

First commercial production: March 2026. Produces India’s first commercially made multi-chip modules.

SiCSem — Bhubaneswar, Odisha

India’s first Silicon Carbide compound semiconductor fab — used in electric vehicles and renewable energy systems.

Important: India still has no approved DRAM or NAND memory fab yet — the exact chips causing the shortage.Current fabs focus on logic chips, not memory chips.

4. Value box — key terms and schemes

India Semiconductor Mission (2021)

Launched December 2021 under the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology. Budget ₹76,000 crore. Gives 50% fiscal support to chip fabs, assembly-test facilities, and design companies. Gujarat (Dholera, Sanand) is the emerging semiconductor hub.

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