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Apple's vendors create 30,000 new jobs under PLI scheme in India

Lava820

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Apple’s three vendors in the country have hit the milestone of creating 30,000 new direct jobs since the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for mobile devices kicked off in April 2021.
Based on the government’s estimate that one direct job in the electronics industry helps to generate three indirect ones, Apple’s vendors, Foxconn Hon Hai, Wistron and Pegatron, are close to creating 100,000 direct and indirect jobs.

The direct jobs that the vendors have created account for a fourth of Apple’s commitment to generate 60 per cent of the new direct jobs out of the 200,000 jobs targeted by the government under the PLI scheme within five years.
And it has achieved this in slightly over a year.

Half of these jobs have been generated by Foxconn Hon Hai at its factory in Tamil Nadu, while the rest have been created by Wistron in Karnataka and the newly-commissioned factory of Pegatron in Tamil Nadu.

According to the Indian Cellular and Electronics Association, mobile device manufacturers (within and outside of PLI) have together generated anything between 125,000 and 150,000 direct jobs in the country.

However, while this happened over a long period of time, Apple’s vendors have achieved it in 15 months.

The three vendors will have to scale up and generate 120,000 new jobs within the entire PLI period.

A spokesperson of Apple Inc however did not respond to queries.

The government, which is under serious pressure to create new jobs, has been examining the performance of the incremental job creation targets which companies have committed to achieve under the various PLI schemes.

The PLI scheme for mobile devices, which was originally launched in 2020, was extended by a year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and started only on April 1, 2021.

Apple’s suppliers make a range of iPhones in India, a large portion of which are meant for global exports.

In FY 2021, its first year under the PLI scheme, Apple exported iPhones worth Rs 10,000 crore through Foxconn and Wistron.
Since April 2022, Pegatron has also started making iPhones for both the domestic and export markets.

According to experts, Apple procures 85 per cent of the phones it sells in India from its suppliers in the country — a huge change from the pre-PLI figure of merely 15 per cent.

Moreover, compared to its competitors, Apple tends to employ 2-3 times more workers for every mobile phone that it makes.

Samsung, which has the world’s largest mobile manufacturing unit in Uttar Pradesh, has only 11,500 workers.

@INDIAPOSITIVE @Raj-Hindustani @Black Tornado @Jackdaws @MH.Yang @Beast @GreatHanWarrior @Bilal9 @Huffal @Windjammer @UKBengali @bluesky @BananaRepublicUK
 
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View attachment 867110Apple’s three vendors in the country have hit the milestone of creating 30,000 new direct jobs since the production-linked incentive (PLI) scheme for mobile devices kicked off in April 2021.
Based on the government’s estimate that one direct job in the electronics industry helps to generate three indirect ones, Apple’s vendors, Foxconn Hon Hai, Wistron and Pegatron, are close to creating 100,000 direct and indirect jobs.

The direct jobs that the vendors have created account for a fourth of Apple’s commitment to generate 60 per cent of the new direct jobs out of the 200,000 jobs targeted by the government under the PLI scheme within five years.
And it has achieved this in slightly over a year.

Half of these jobs have been generated by Foxconn Hon Hai at its factory in Tamil Nadu, while the rest have been created by Wistron in Karnataka and the newly-commissioned factory of Pegatron in Tamil Nadu.

According to the Indian Cellular and Electronics Association, mobile device manufacturers (within and outside of PLI) have together generated anything between 125,000 and 150,000 direct jobs in the country.

However, while this happened over a long period of time, Apple’s vendors have achieved it in 15 months.

The three vendors will have to scale up and generate 120,000 new jobs within the entire PLI period.

A spokesperson of Apple Inc however did not respond to queries.

The government, which is under serious pressure to create new jobs, has been examining the performance of the incremental job creation targets which companies have committed to achieve under the various PLI schemes.

The PLI scheme for mobile devices, which was originally launched in 2020, was extended by a year due to the Covid-19 pandemic, and started only on April 1, 2021.

Apple’s suppliers make a range of iPhones in India, a large portion of which are meant for global exports.

In FY 2021, its first year under the PLI scheme, Apple exported iPhones worth Rs 10,000 crore through Foxconn and Wistron.
Since April 2022, Pegatron has also started making iPhones for both the domestic and export markets.

According to experts, Apple procures 85 per cent of the phones it sells in India from its suppliers in the country — a huge change from the pre-PLI figure of merely 15 per cent.

Moreover, compared to its competitors, Apple tends to employ 2-3 times more workers for every mobile phone that it makes.

Samsung, which has the world’s largest mobile manufacturing unit in Uttar Pradesh, has only 11,500 workers.

@INDIAPOSITIVE @Raj-Hindustani @Black Tornado @Jackdaws @MH.Yang @Beast @GreatHanWarrior @Bilal9 @Huffal @Windjammer @UKBengali @bluesky @BananaRepublicUK
Create more PLI schemes, create more jobs.
 
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And apple is just one of the latest companies to jump on the "buy now pay later" bandwagon
 
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Well I'd say congrats in any case but the nationalistic chest-beating news is inaccurate. Rs. 10,000 crore exports so what? How many families are being fed when wages are not even paid?

This is the same thing as garments labor. What special screw turning skills are being transferred to India?

Your politicians only see big names and are too glad to give them a manufacturing location tax free, but what ToT is coming to India? All smoke/mirrors and dhokeybaaji.....

Apple wins big by getting sales outlets and sales in India (for high end customers, four out of top five smartphones sold in India are all still Chinese (Vivo, Realme etc.). iPhones, especially iPhone 12, cannot be afforded by regular person on the street in India.

The labor value addition is mostly by screw turning low skill folks. Cheap labor used in India, just like Bangladesh. No skills transferred, nothing.

But Hon Hai is also not an Indian company as far as I know. Profits mostly funneled back straight to Taiwan.

Foxconn Hon Hai, Pegatron and Wistron were and are ASSEMBLING phones with IMPORTED Chinese and Taiwanese components, NO iPHONE COMPONENT IS MADE LOCALLY IN INDIA as far as I know and have seen in reports.

So yeah, actually worse than Bangladesh because some Bangladeshi mfrs. make parts like cellphone motherboards, housings and screens locally to their own design. Value addition in this case for Bangladesh is higher.

Yeah some of you feminine types will come in and say "Jwal raha hai etc."

Take a look and THEN comment in level-headed manner,


The story of Apple in India has been one of food poisoning, poor wages and living conditions. I feel sorry for iPhone assembler workers in India..... :rolleyes:

Apple puts Indian iPhone factory 'on probation'​

    • Published
      29 December 2021
Share
Foxconn logo seen on an iPhone


Apple has placed an iPhone factory in southern India "on probation" following protests over food poisoning and living conditions.
An audit by Apple found that remote dining rooms and dormitories used by workers did not meet requirements.

Around 250 women who worked at the Foxconn plant were affected by food poisoning, with more than 150 ending up in hospital, local media reported.

Foxconn apologised and said it was investigating the situation.

"We are very sorry for the issue our employees experienced and are taking immediate steps to enhance the facilities and services we provide," the Taiwanese firm said in a statement.

The factory has been closed since 18 December, when the protests began.

Apple has not specified what being on probation means but in the past it has declined to award new business to facilities on probation until problems are resolved.

An Apple spokesman said: "Following recent concerns about food safety and accommodation conditions at Foxconn Sriperumbudur, we dispatched independent auditors.

"We found that some of the remote dormitory accommodations and dining rooms being used for employees do not meet our requirements, and we are working with the supplier to ensure a comprehensive set of corrective actions are rapidly implemented."
The iPhone factory, which is about 25 miles (40km) from Chennai, employs 17,000 people.

The food-poisoning cases and subsequent protests also led the Tamil Nadu state government to ask Foxconn to review its worker facilities.

Last year, Apple had to place another iPhone manufacturing partner on probation after worker riots broke out over unpaid wages at the partner's factory near Bangalore (Wistron).

See Wistron unpaid wages disturbance videos below. Incredible India !!



Following these events - Apple restricted accepting Wistron assembled iPhones.

 
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A large number of businesses use all possible tactics to exploit the work force. Some of the worst ones are the local ones since they have political connections.
The unrest at Apple factory highlighted various labour related lacunas. Since it got wide media coverage, Apple was forced to take actions to mitigate any future unrest.

One can’t expect that all businesses coming to a country are only the cutting edge and nothing less. And anything less then space tech is derided. No company from outside comes and gives technology on a platter. It happens only after a home grown ecosystem is developed. India has done good work in this regard and now large number of leading tech companies are setting up R&D base as well as manufacturing.

Moreover, there is a work force that is capable of just tightening the nuts and bolts. They may not be of much use in designing chips. They would be more than happy to fit nuts and bolts and earn a living.

Bravo to Apple and India to generate these nut bolt jobs.
 
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Well I'd say congrats in any case but the nationalistic chest-beating news is inaccurate. Rs. 10,000 crore exports so what? How many families are being fed when wages are not even paid?

This is the same thing as garments labor. What special screw turning skills are being transferred to India?

Your politicians only see big names and are too glad to give them a manufacturing location tax free, but what ToT is coming to India? All smoke/mirrors and dhokeybaaji.....

Apple wins big by getting sales outlets and sales in India (for high end customers, four out of top five smartphones sold in India are all still Chinese (Vivo, Realme etc.). iPhones, especially iPhone 12, cannot be afforded by regular person on the street in India.

The labor value addition is mostly by screw turning low skill folks. Cheap labor used in India, just like Bangladesh. No skills transferred, nothing.

But Hon Hai is also not an Indian company as far as I know. Profits mostly funneled back straight to Taiwan.

Foxconn Hon Hai, Pegatron and Wistron were and are ASSEMBLING phones with IMPORTED Chinese and Taiwanese components, NO iPHONE COMPONENT IS MADE LOCALLY IN INDIA as far as I know and have seen in reports.

So yeah, actually worse than Bangladesh because some Bangladeshi mfrs. make parts like cellphone motherboards, housings and screens locally to their own design. Value addition in this case for Bangladesh is higher.

Yeah some of you feminine types will come in and say "Jwal raha hai etc."

Take a look and THEN comment in level-headed manner,


The story of Apple in India has been one of food poisoning, poor wages and living conditions. I feel sorry for iPhone assembler workers in India..... :rolleyes:

Apple puts Indian iPhone factory 'on probation'​

    • Published
      29 December 2021
Share
Foxconn logo seen on an iPhone


Apple has placed an iPhone factory in southern India "on probation" following protests over food poisoning and living conditions.
An audit by Apple found that remote dining rooms and dormitories used by workers did not meet requirements.

Around 250 women who worked at the Foxconn plant were affected by food poisoning, with more than 150 ending up in hospital, local media reported.

Foxconn apologised and said it was investigating the situation.

"We are very sorry for the issue our employees experienced and are taking immediate steps to enhance the facilities and services we provide," the Taiwanese firm said in a statement.

The factory has been closed since 18 December, when the protests began.

Apple has not specified what being on probation means but in the past it has declined to award new business to facilities on probation until problems are resolved.

An Apple spokesman said: "Following recent concerns about food safety and accommodation conditions at Foxconn Sriperumbudur, we dispatched independent auditors.

"We found that some of the remote dormitory accommodations and dining rooms being used for employees do not meet our requirements, and we are working with the supplier to ensure a comprehensive set of corrective actions are rapidly implemented."
The iPhone factory, which is about 25 miles (40km) from Chennai, employs 17,000 people.

The food-poisoning cases and subsequent protests also led the Tamil Nadu state government to ask Foxconn to review its worker facilities.

Last year, Apple had to place another iPhone manufacturing partner on probation after worker riots broke out over unpaid wages at the partner's factory near Bangalore (Wistron).

See Wistron unpaid wages disturbance videos below. Incredible India !!



Following these events - Apple restricted accepting Wistron assembled iPhones.

If you spent this much time on your own economy, Bangladesh wouldn't have to go to IMF today.
 
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If you spent this much time on your own economy, Bangladesh wouldn't have to go to IMF today.

Bangladesh economy is doing just dandy Dada. Worry about your own....staying ahead of trouble is a smart thing, which is exactly what we're doing by going to the IMF to get booster funds.

It's not my fault that the top tier of the Sanghi echelon is lazy and used to doing and managing everything in half-a$$ manner. Took me less than three minutes to find these pictures and videos....as usual bhakts sitting around munching on Parle-G.

The chest-beating in "new India" comes from the fact that everything was down in the dumps historically and all of a sudden there are things that are "Shwapner Otit".....
 
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Bangladesh economy is doing just dandy Dada. Worry about your own....staying ahead of trouble is a smart thing, which is exactly what we're doing by going to the IMF to get booster funds.

It's not my fault that the top tier of the Sanghi echelon is lazy and used to doing and managing everything in half-a$$ manner. Took me less than three minutes to find these pictures and videos....as usual bhakts sitting around munching on Parle-G.

The chest-beating in "new India" comes from the fact that everything was down in the dumps historically and all of a sudden there are things that are "Shwapner Otit".....

So Apple making 1.3 Billion $ export from India is a bad thing.

The Forex it brings in is a bad thing.

The 1,20,000 people it employed in India is a bad thing.

The Thousands of subsidiary jobs, employment, ecosystem it created in India is a bad thing.

The only good thing is the underwear exports from Bangladesh, a nation that does not even produce Cotton.


Sounds just about right.
 
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So Apple making 1.3 Billion $ export from India is a bad thing.

The Forex it brings in is a bad thing.

The 1,20,000 people it employed in India is a bad thing.

The Thousands of subsidiary jobs, employment, ecosystem it created in India is a bad thing.

The only good thing is the underwear exports from Bangladesh, a nation that does not even produce Cotton.


Sounds just about right.

You didn't get it. No one was saying having screwdriver jobs feeding Indian families was bad.

The point was that your bhakt buddies were claiming (or issuing innuendo to that effect) that India is so advanced in tech because Apple's profiteer scumbucket iPhone assemblers (not Apple itself, mind you) came in to India offering screwdriver jobs at the behest, pleading and begging of your Hindutva leaders, just so their faces could be saved in front of their voters, that India could now claim to be "hardware superpower".

Some bhakts were even claiming iPhone were being "manufactured" in India, a stretch from "screwing parts together".

Your own media confirmed that Apple had NO PLANS to localize iPhone parts from India. EVER.

I just pointed out that it was nothing but screwdriver operations - there was no need for puffery. This was just a sham and nothing like bhakts claimed. Imported parts were being screwed together. Nothing more, nothing less.

And I'd argue much worse a sham than spinning cotton, weaving textiles, sewing and assembling clothes.

Though no one in Bangladesh will ever claim the apparel industry to be the epitome of industrial excellence. But it does feed the poor. As do screwdriver jobs we ourselves provide. We don't need Hon Hai or Wistron to come in for that.

You know - in Bangladesh we at least decided to do some backward integration. Like design/produce some of our own cellphone parts for our smartphones, that even being a country twenty four years younger and an eighth the size of your economy.

And what's wrong with not producing cotton? It's just a commodity, like any other.

Is it like heroin/cocaine now, supplier controls the market?

Bangladesh is the second largest importer of cotton, and India's share in it has been shrinking rapidly. Bangladesh is on the way to top China as the top importer of cotton. It's just business.

It is a sad story that India, despite being a large producer of cotton, cannot beat Bangladesh in the apparel game. I mean - not even close!

And you know what a "good thing" would be? Designing and exporting a 100% designed and 100% made in India phone - $10 Billion worth. But such a thing does not exist. Who knows if it ever will?
 
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:chilli::chilli::chilli:
Well I'd say congrats in any case but the nationalistic chest-beating news is inaccurate. Rs. 10,000 crore exports so what? How many families are being fed when wages are not even paid?

This is the same thing as garments labor. What special screw turning skills are being transferred to India?

Your politicians only see big names and are too glad to give them a manufacturing location tax free, but what ToT is coming to India? All smoke/mirrors and dhokeybaaji.....

Apple wins big by getting sales outlets and sales in India (for high end customers, four out of top five smartphones sold in India are all still Chinese (Vivo, Realme etc.). iPhones, especially iPhone 12, cannot be afforded by regular person on the street in India.

The labor value addition is mostly by screw turning low skill folks. Cheap labor used in India, just like Bangladesh. No skills transferred, nothing.

But Hon Hai is also not an Indian company as far as I know. Profits mostly funneled back straight to Taiwan.

Foxconn Hon Hai, Pegatron and Wistron were and are ASSEMBLING phones with IMPORTED Chinese and Taiwanese components, NO iPHONE COMPONENT IS MADE LOCALLY IN INDIA as far as I know and have seen in reports.

So yeah, actually worse than Bangladesh because some Bangladeshi mfrs. make parts like cellphone motherboards, housings and screens locally to their own design. Value addition in this case for Bangladesh is higher.

Yeah some of you feminine types will come in and say "Jwal raha hai etc."

Take a look and THEN comment in level-headed manner,


The story of Apple in India has been one of food poisoning, poor wages and living conditions. I feel sorry for iPhone assembler workers in India..... :rolleyes:

Apple puts Indian iPhone factory 'on probation'​

    • Published
      29 December 2021
Share
Foxconn logo seen on an iPhone


Apple has placed an iPhone factory in southern India "on probation" following protests over food poisoning and living conditions.
An audit by Apple found that remote dining rooms and dormitories used by workers did not meet requirements.

Around 250 women who worked at the Foxconn plant were affected by food poisoning, with more than 150 ending up in hospital, local media reported.

Foxconn apologised and said it was investigating the situation.

"We are very sorry for the issue our employees experienced and are taking immediate steps to enhance the facilities and services we provide," the Taiwanese firm said in a statement.

The factory has been closed since 18 December, when the protests began.

Apple has not specified what being on probation means but in the past it has declined to award new business to facilities on probation until problems are resolved.

An Apple spokesman said: "Following recent concerns about food safety and accommodation conditions at Foxconn Sriperumbudur, we dispatched independent auditors.

"We found that some of the remote dormitory accommodations and dining rooms being used for employees do not meet our requirements, and we are working with the supplier to ensure a comprehensive set of corrective actions are rapidly implemented."
The iPhone factory, which is about 25 miles (40km) from Chennai, employs 17,000 people.

The food-poisoning cases and subsequent protests also led the Tamil Nadu state government to ask Foxconn to review its worker facilities.

Last year, Apple had to place another iPhone manufacturing partner on probation after worker riots broke out over unpaid wages at the partner's factory near Bangalore (Wistron).

See Wistron unpaid wages disturbance videos below. Incredible India !!



Following these events - Apple restricted accepting Wistron assembled iPhones.

 
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Good.

I hope Tata Electronics starts actual production instead of signing MOU's with State Govts. No evidence of actual production exists. Please share if you have this.

And the Taiwanese connector maker has not seen any actual investments in India either. All news is from two years ago, saying they will start production "soon". Did that "soon" ever arrive?
 
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Good.

I hope Tata starts actual production instead of signing MOU's with State Govts. No evidence of actual production exists. Please share if you have this.

And the Taiwanese connector maker has not seen any actual investments in India either. All news is from two years ago, saying they will start production "soon". Did that "soon" ever arrive?
 
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I hope Indian brands capture a significant domestic handset market share before the end of this decade. The manufacturing eco system brought by Foxconn and the likes will surely make it possible :cheers:
 
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You didn't get it. No one was saying having screwdriver jobs feeding Indian families was bad.

The point was that your bhakt buddies were claiming (or issuing innuendo to that effect) that India is so advanced in tech because Apple's profiteer scumbucket iPhone assemblers (not Apple itself, mind you) came in to India offering screwdriver jobs at the behest, pleading and begging of your Hindutva leaders, just so their faces could be saved in front of their voters, that India could now claim to be "hardware superpower".

Some bhakts were even claiming iPhone were being "manufactured" in India, a stretch from "screwing parts together".

Your own media confirmed that Apple had NO PLANS to localize iPhone parts from India. EVER.

I just pointed out that it was nothing but screwdriver operations - there was no need for puffery. This was just a sham and nothing like bhakts claimed. Imported parts were being screwed together. Nothing more, nothing less.

And I'd argue much worse a sham than spinning cotton, weaving textiles, sewing and assembling clothes.

Though no one in Bangladesh will ever claim the apparel industry to be the epitome of industrial excellence. But it does feed the poor. As do screwdriver jobs we ourselves provide. We don't need Hon Hai or Wistron to come in for that.

You know - in Bangladesh we at least decided to do some backward integration. Like design/produce some of our own cellphone parts for our smartphones, that even being a country twenty four years younger and an eighth the size of your economy.

And what's wrong with not producing cotton? It's just a commodity, like any other.

Is it like heroin/cocaine now, supplier controls the market?

Bangladesh is the second largest importer of cotton, and India's share in it has been shrinking rapidly. Bangladesh is on the way to top China as the top importer of cotton. It's just business.

It is a sad story that India, despite being a large producer of cotton, cannot beat Bangladesh in the apparel game. I mean - not even close!

And you know what a "good thing" would be? Designing and exporting a 100% designed and 100% made in India phone - $10 Billion worth. But such a thing does not exist. Who knows if it ever will?
If nothing else we do get to enjoy cheaper iPhone in India. You are right about value addition is not happening at faster pace, but you have to understand that ecosystem takes time to be developed. For example in India, Walmart and Ikea have to source half their products from local manufacturers. So, they had to train local to meet their standards. Draw back in foreign investors is that they take their profits back which will be a drain on our dollar reserves. ToT is what is needed and our local players will put back their money in Indian economy.
 
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