All the latest UK technology news, reviews and analysis

Rumours hint at Dell quitting China

by Dan Worth

24 Mar 2010

Comment: 1

  • Tweet this
Michael Dell
Michael Dell is apparently quoted as saying he wants to quit China

Dell could be planning to close its operations in China and relocate them to India, according to reports.

An article in the Indian Financial Chronicle claims that Dell chief executive Michael Dell told Indian prime minister Manmohan Singh that he was considering moving the Chinese business to India.

Singh was speaking after a meeting of the country's planning commission and apparently urged the commission to apply its mind to the "development of hardware and parts of the computer industry".

"This morning I met the chairman of Dell corporation. They would like to shift to a safer environment with a climate conducive to enterprise and with the security of a legal system. I think this is an area where there are immense opportunities," he is reported as saying.

Singh added that Dell had told him that the company currently buys equipment and parts worth $25bn (£16bn) from China, and that any move to India would represent a significant shift in trade away from the Chinese economy.

However, Dell moved quickly to quash the rumours by issuing a statement clarifying Michael Dell's remarks, and insisting that he was referring to the fact that India had the potential "also" to become a manufacturing hub like China.

"Dell has not made any plans to shift its component spend at this time," the statement added.

The speculation comes just days after Google stopped censoring searches in China and laid down the gauntlet to the Chinese authorities over its position in the country.

Other firms such as Microsoft have said in the past that they will not leave China.

Do you agree?

 

Add your comment

We won't publish your address
By submitting a comment you agree to abide by our Terms & Conditions. Your comment will be moderated before publication.

Poll

Flame virus poll

Are you confident that the UK's IT infrastructure is secure from attack in the wake of the Flame malware revelations?

34%

1%

11%

54%

Connect with V3.co.uk

Sign up to our daily or weekly newsletters

Symanteccloud

Social networking: a guide for IT managers

Social networking is almost ubiquitous. This white paper examines the benefits and risks and it looks at the different ways companies can reconcile them

Riverbed

Mitigating the risks of IT change

The importance of understanding your infrastructure

Python Django Developer 55k

Python Developer / Python Django Team Leader London 55k...

Application Architect - Java London

Java Architect / Application Architect London 70k...

SQL Server Developer 60k

SQL Server Developer SQL Server Banking SQL Server...

User Interface Developer Cloud London Finance

User Interface Developer / UI Developer / User interface...

To send to more than one email address, simply separate each address with a comma.