Apple Can Have A Try In India But Can’t Find Another China: Chinese State-Run Media
Apple is rich and powerful so it can have a try in India to manufacture more high-end products but it can’t find another China as the firm will consume the energy of its
development gradually in attempting such a transfer, Chinese state-run publication People’s Daily has said. In an opinion piece published in Global Times, the publication said
whether Apple’s move to India is a forced “political decision” or a forward-looking “economic decision,” there is no doubt that it comes against the backdrop of
Washington’s shift to a containment-based strategy toward China. “On the surface, this may seem bad for China, but in the long run, it is a good thing for the country. It is
not so much a test of smartphones made in China as it is a test of the US’ ‘decoupling’ policy,” read the piece. Apple’s transfer will not necessarily be successful, but
failure is also possible. “In 2013, when I first came to work in Brazil, I heard that Foxconn was going to invest billions of dollars in the state of Sao Paulo to build a
manufacturing center, creating 100,000 jobs. Three years later, when I left Brazil, the factory was on the verge of closing down. Now, they say another Brazil factory can assemble
the 6.1-inch iPhone 13,” wrote Ding Gang, a senior editor with People’s Daily, and a senior fellow with the Chongyang Institute for Financial Studies. In a fillip to India’s
thrust on local manufacturing, Apple last month confirmed it has kicked off the production of new iPhone 14 in India, a first for the tech giant as it narrows down the
manufacturing period of new iPhones in India, along with China which is its key global manufacturing hub. The locally-assembled iPhone 14 will go on sale in the country in the
fourth quarter, as the company bolsters its local manufacturing/assembling plans by spending billions of dollars. “The new iPhone 14 lineup introduces groundbreaking new
technologies and important safety capabilities. We’re excited to be manufacturing iPhone 14 in India,” Apple had told IANS in a statement. The article said that Apple’s move
to India may be successful, but the process must not be smooth, “as it depends on how India can adjust its labour policies, and whether India can improve its labour ability in a
short period of time, and keep up with basic facilities, infrastructure as well as services”. To this extent, Apple is also exploring the road for other foreign investors,
including Chinese manufacturers. Gang said that Apple has moved to India for assembly, but the vast majority of components for its iPhone and iPad, among other products, are made
Find Out
More