Made in America Push Puts Apple India Expansion at Risk
Why in News?
Former US President Donald Trump’s recent demand for Apple to shift manufacturing from India to the US has created a strategic dilemma for CEO Tim Cook. This comes as Apple aims to produce 25% of iPhones in India by 2025 to reduce China dependence, having already grown India production by 60% to $2.7 billion in FY2024. 
Key Developments
1. Apple’s India Bet
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Current Output: 7% of global iPhones made in India (vs. 90% in China)
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Investment: $500M announced for Indian suppliers in Feb 2025
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Advantage: Labor costs 30% lower than China
2. Trump’s Ultimatum
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Public statement: “India can take care of themselves…build in the US”
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Hidden agenda: Part of broader strategy to leverage tariffs (now 30% on Chinese imports)
3. Economic Realities
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US-made iPhones could cost 3,500(vs.current1,000-1,500)
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78% of Apple’s suppliers are in Asia (Bloomberg data)
Strategic Implications
For Apple
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Diplomatic Tightrope: Cook must balance Trump’s demands with supply chain logic
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Plan B: Accelerating Vietnam production as neutral ground
For India
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Opportunity: Could gain 18% of Apple’s global production if US pressure eases
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Risk: Losing $3B+ potential investments if Trump enforces sanctions
For US
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Political Win: “Made in America” narrative for elections
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Economic Loss: Consumers face 250% price hikes on premium models
Comparative Analysis
| Factor | India Production | US Production |
|---|---|---|
| Labor Cost/Hour | $2.5 | $35 |
| Supply Chain Maturity | Developing | Non-existent |
| Tariff Impact | None | +30% on parts |
| Time to Scale | 3 years | 7+ years |
What Next?
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Corporate Diplomacy: Cook may offer token US investments (like 2025’s $900M)
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Policy Leverage: India could counter with higher import duties on US tech
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Supply Chain Diversification: Vietnam/Thailand as compromise destinations
Quote: “This is a game of chicken—Trump wants political points, Apple needs economic sense” – Tech Analyst, Bloomberg
5 Key Questions
Q1: Why is Apple expanding in India despite Trump’s demands?
A1: To de-risk from China (post-COVID disruptions) and tap India’s low-cost labor.
Q2: How would US manufacturing hurt Apple?
A2: 3X higher costs and lack of supplier ecosystem could erase profit margins.
Q3: What’s Trump’s real objective?
A3: To showcase “America First” success ahead of elections, not economic logic.
Q4: Can India replace China for Apple?
A4: Not fully—India currently lacks scale (only 7% output) but is fastest-growing alternative.
Q5: Has Cook handled such crises before?
A5: Yes—negotiated tariff exemptions in 2019 by highlighting Apple’s US job creation.
