If the assembly line is shifted lock stock and barrel to India,then Pakistan will have to rely on India for spares

That's not going to happen.I guess GOI wants the second aircraft line to be an export oriented one without any commitment from IAF ..
why not ?? .. lockheed can set up a 100 % owned subsidiary !!brar_w wrote:That's not going to happen.I guess GOI wants the second aircraft line to be an export oriented one without any commitment from IAF ..
LM's CEO even put out a minimum number : 100 a/c is the trigger for the line to be shifted. The TX facilities are 110% depreciated. MP did say he does not expect 100% ToT and that he expects max local sourcing over a number of years.shiv wrote:The F-16 line will not come to India without commitment to buy. That won't happen. Someone call me out if it does.
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why not?? Lockheeed can set up a 100% owned subsidiary!! … profits will come over a longer time that’s all!
Finally IMHO, the F-16s could simply be a way to buy time (replace some 250 MiGs/Jaguars due for retirement by 2018 in double quick time?) for the AMCA/FGFA. We'd be replacing 50 year old designs with a 40 year old one but the F-16 Block 60+ or whatever is still relevant and come pretty cheap (LM sees JSF at $80MM so the Viper has got to be a lot less given full R&D amortization)
The subtext seems to be less concern about the IAF's light/medium/heavy/plus size wish list and more with practical numbers and building up an industrial base of people skills as well as a supply chain for the long haul.
Nobody who matters is looking into it AFAIK. However vested interests are creating news that it will happen..Yagnasri wrote:I thought F16 reached its design end or something like that and has no future. So why we are looking into it after rejecting it in the competition. Will it be cheaper for mass purchase? I do not think so.
So what is the use?
Not sure if you are out of touch with Indian colleges - there are now dozens which will give IITs a run for their money. IIT always on top ended more than a decade ago.Cosmo_R wrote: Besides, a bidding war for scarce local talent may just shift the tides in the regional Engg colleges towards skilled technician jobs rather than aiming at impossible dreams of competing with IIT types.
Completely out of touch. But the ones I am referring to are:shiv wrote:
Not sure if you are out of touch with Indian colleges - there are now dozens which will give IITs a run for their money. IIT always on top ended more than a decade ago.
The absence of a MIC is even more provocative to the other side. Weakness perceived or real, invites aggression.kit wrote:the more a MIC develops the more wars it support !! ..China here we come
The fabled tech part AKA ToT comes much later.rajanb wrote:100% in Defense FDI. OMG.
A convoluted decsion belonging in the real of fiscal prudence.
The same people who screamed against it during their days in oposition?
But this is not about that. Not about politics.
We will get bugger all.
Yes! They will make bits and parts of what they need. Not the tech. that helps us be independent.
Exactly! That is what I argued in the now unlocatable original FDI thread. For example, 36 off the shelf Rafales plus accessories is the same as 100% FDI in a profit sense but without any creation of a trained workforce in India. Now if they had 100% ownership in India and even if they imported 100% from France in the first year, they would still have to pay and train workers, pay for infrastructure, contribute to community projects etc. In the 100% FDI scenario, they still have to sell the IAF (before they invest) so they will be mindful of Boeing/LM competition on price/quality.Aditya G wrote:The beauty of 100% FDI in defense is that you need not import fully built hardware. Isnt that better than having 49% FDI limit but no real takers for it?
Let the likes of Boeing establish fully owned factories here. What do we loose? There were similar concerns about automobile industry previously but as of today you have several manufacturers with shop setup in India with <20% import content on many makes
I would say that was probably the reason. In fact, almost all outsourcing to India is driven by low cost wages.Dhananjay wrote:Saurabh ji, I'm not arguing against your point, but a question arose in me reading your post, why germans went to the length of installing such a robotised unit in Bharat? Surely big profit margine would come from low wages employees, which in the above mentioned factory is missing.
Otherwise what else cost saving factors were their for germans to move it here?
Surely if the factory was in baden baden instead it would've been easier if the robots needed repair for engineers from stuttgart or hamburg to come and repair instead of flying all the way to Bharat.
I want to repeat, I am not arguing against you just want to learn.