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Apple's giant Make-in-India leap

India is expected to match China's production capacity of 45-50 percent for Apple's iPhones by 2027.

April 21, 2023 / 18:45 IST
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Apple CEO Tim Cook at the opening of the Apple Store in Mumbai on April 18.

The very first Apple product that was available for sale in India was the Mackintosh personal computer, way back in 1998. But guess what? It was only in 2017 and thereafter that Apple started making iPhones in India and it was only on April 18, 2023, that Apple opened its first store in India in Mumbai and the second one in New Delhi on April 20, 2023. Basically, it took a good 25 years for Apple to open a store in India, but the good news is, Apple's two stores are a big deal for various reasons.

More than 90 percent of Apple's iPhones were produced and assembled in China till two years back but there is a palpable shift now, with 7 percent of Apple's overall iPhones being produced in India last year and that number will rise to 10-15 percent this year. Remember, that number was just 1 percent in 2021. What caused this paradigm shift in coaxing Apple to Make in India?

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Well, for starters, thanks to India's production linked incentive  (PLI) scheme to promote Make in India, under the aegis of the Narendra Modi government, India's smartphone production with made-in-India iPhone shipments grew by 65 percent in volume terms and 162 percent in value terms last year.

Under the handset PLI scheme launched in April 2020, foreign companies had to invest Rs 250 crore and attain Rs 4,000 crore worth of incremental output/sales in the first year, to be eligible for a 6 percent incentive as payback. Apple's contract manufacturers, namely Foxconn and Pegatron, both located in Tamil Nadu and Wistron, which is in Karnataka, are participants in the Modi government's PLI scheme and have committed to jointly producing at least Rs 3.6 lakh crore worth of iPhones over a five-year period, of which 80 percent will be exported.