
Santa Clara, California-based Intel already has a development center in India's technology capital, Bangalore, which designs and develops software to power chips that drive computers and high-end networks for Internet-based applications.
Over the past year, Maran has been aggressively lobbying firms to set up manufacturing units in India.
While India's software skills are widely recognized and firms such as Motorola have set up large units to outsource software services, the country is still not considered a world-class manufacturing destination due to its creaky infrastructure and restrictive labor laws.
There are no chip manufacturing units in the country.
But the tide is turning and firms such as Nokia and LG Electronics Inc. are investing millions of dollars to set up mobile handset manufacturing plants in India to cater for growing demand in Asia's fourth-largest economy.
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