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 11,000 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.
Based on estimates, Apple will likely increase its production by more than 3 times to over Rs 45,000 crore in FY 2022-23, a large part of which will be exported.
Experts say that Apple’s three big challenges in expanding to global scale in India are shifting its supply chain to this country, its ability to build and operate large factories under efficient labour conditions, and remaining competitive vis-à-vis China and Vietnam.
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