Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Submit Guest Post

India, Malaysia to deepen semiconductor partnership

Two countries also signed agreements on renewable energy, health and AI

India Malaysia

India's prime minister Narendra Modi and Malaysian prime minister Anwar Ibrahim hold hands during a press conference in Putrajaya on February 8, 2026.

(Photo by Hasnoor Hussain / POOL / AFP via Getty Images)

INDIA and Malaysia pledged on Sunday (8) to deepen their semiconductor partnership as the Indian Ocean neighbours ramp up trade and security links during a visit by prime minister Narendra Modi.

Modi touched down in Malaysia on Saturday (7), his first visit in more than a decade, where he inked a number of agreements with Malaysian counterpart Anwar Ibrahim, including deals on renewable energy, health care and artificial intelligence.


"Along with AI and digital technologies, we will advance our partnership in semiconductors, health, and food security," Modi said.

"This meeting and these exchanges are very vital, very strategic and critical to advance and enhance relations between India and Malaysia," Anwar added at a news conference in Malaysia's administrative capital Putrajaya.

Malaysia ranks sixth in worldwide exports of semiconductors, while the sector contributes around 25 per cent of gross domestic product, according to Malaysian government figures.

India's foreign ministry said the southeast Asian nation had a "very strong semiconductor ecosystem".

"They have almost 30 to 40 years of experience in those areas," the ministry added in a statement ahead of Modi's arrival.

"Our companies are... interested in collaborating with Malaysia," it said, including in research and development and building manufacturing and testing plants.

For instance, Tata Electronics was in talks last June with global semiconductor companies to buy a fabrication or outsourced semiconductor assembly or test plant in Malaysia, Indian and Malaysian news reports said at the time.

Last year India exported $7.32 billion (£5.37bn) in goods, mainly in engineering and petroleum products, said the India Brand Equity Foundation.

Imports from Malaysia amounted to $12.54bn (£9.21bn), mainly minerals, vegetable oil and electrical machinery and equipment.

Malaysia also has a large Indian-origin population, around 6.8 per cent, or almost three million people, official statistics said.

"This living bridge... of diaspora is a great strength for us. The steps taken for their welfare lend a human foundation to our relationship," Modi said.

(AFP)

Add EasternEye As Your Trusted Source
preferred source on google news

More For You

us-india-trade-deal

US president Donald Trump with India's prime minister Narendra Modi during a bilateral meeting as part of the G7 summit, in Evian, eastern France, on June 17, 2026.

Getty Images

India holds out for better terms in US trade talks

INDIA and the United States failed to reach an agreement during recent trade talks, with New Delhi refusing to rush into a deal without better terms, according to officials and analysts.

India's trade minister, Piyush Goyal, said on Monday that both countries remained "fully engaged" in their commitment to reaching an agreement that is balanced and beneficial to both economies.

Keep ReadingShow less