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Apple lobbies for incentives as it plans ipad assembly in India

The company has steadily raised production of iphones in India to lessen its dependence on Chinese manufactur­ing as per Delhi’s new plans

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Apple is angling to participat­e in a new scheme to boost India’s exports of computer products, part of what government and industry sources say are plans to bring ipad tablet manufactur­ing to the South Asian country.

India launched a $6.7 billion plan to boost smartphone exports last year, as Prime Minister Narendra Modi stepped up efforts to promote electronic­s manufactur­ing and create jobs.

Apple, which has steadily raised production of iphones in India to lessen its dependence on Chinese manufactur­ing, took part in that scheme via its contract manufactur­ers.

Now the government is preparing to unveil another incentive to drive local manufactur­ing of IT products including tablets, laptops and servers, three sources closely involved in the drating of the plan told Reuters.

The new performanc­e-linked incentive (PLI) scheme, which offers cash-back to manufactur­ers for exports, will have a budget of up to Rs70 billion ($964.5 million) over five years, the sources said. It’s expected to be launched by the end of February.

Apple, along with others, is lobbying for a bigger budgetary outlay of 200 billion rupees before that plan is finalised, as India doesn’t yet have the scale or the supply chain for making IT products and competes with duty-free imports of tech products, two of the sources said.

Apple’s push comes at a time its iphone supplier Wistron is just restarting operations at a southern Indian plant ater angry workers went on a rampage last year. Apple is yet to take the Taiwan manufactur­er off of probation. Apple declined to comment for this story.

New Delhi is also planning another PLI, at a budget of roughly Rs50 billion over five years, to boost domestic manufactur­ing of wearable devices such as smartwatch­es, the sources said, adding the plan could be announced within two months. All the sources declined to be named as the plans are not public.

Apple assembles a bulk of its ipads in China, but is fast diversifyi­ng production to markets such as India and Vietnam to minimise the impact of the Us-china trade war and the coronaviru­s crisis.

Its top supplier Foxconn is building assembly lines for ipads and Macbook laptops in Vietnam, Reuters reported late last year. Other ipad assemblers include Taiwan’s Compal Electronic­s and China’s BYD Electronic Internatio­nal.

In India, Apple will likely have ipad’s assembled by one of its existing suppliers in the country as early as this year, two of the sources said, though its plans could get delayed as India makes the entry of BYD difficult amid its wariness to give new tech business to Chinese companies.

“The government is asking Apple to get ipads assembled by its contract manufactur­ers here, the non-chinese companies” one of the sources, a government official said.

It was not immediatel­y clear which of Apple’s three contractor­s in India - Foxconn, Wistron and Pegatron - would assemble ipads.

Pegatron and Wistron did not respond to requests for comment while Foxconn said it does not comment on specific operations or work for a customer. India’s IT ministry also did not respond to a request for comment.

India last year banned more than 200 Chinese-origin mobile applicatio­ns, saying they threatened the security of the country. It also announced new controls on telecoms gear purchases.

Cupertino, California-based Apple began the assembly of iphones in India in 2017 and has since ramped up manufactur­ing operations via the local units of Foxconn and Wistron. Pegatron also set up a base in India last year.

Foxconn will invest up to $1 billion to expand a factory in southern India where the Taiwanese contract manufactur­er assembles iphones, Reuters reported previously.

The three Apple suppliers have also commited roughly $900 million over five years to make iphones in India.

With only a tiny share of the world’s fastestgro­wing major smartphone market, Apple is stepping up its push into India, with a first targeted TV advertisin­g campaign, expanded retail network and promotiona­l financing schemes.

Meanwhile, Nissan Motor said on Monday it is not in talks with Apple, following a report that the iphone maker approached the Japanese company in recent months about a tie-up for its autonomous car project.

The Financial Times said the companies had had brief discussion­s that faltered over Nissan’s reluctance to become an assembler for Apple-branded cars, adding that the talks had not advanced to senior management level.

“We are not in talks with Apple,” a Nissan spokeswoma­n said. “However, Nissan is always open to exploring collaborat­ions and partnershi­ps to accelerate industry transforma­tion.”

The spokeswoma­n declined to comment further. Representa­tives for Apple were not immediatel­y available for comment.

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An Apple salesperso­n speaks to customers at an electronic­s store in Mumbai.
File/reuters ↑ An Apple salesperso­n speaks to customers at an electronic­s store in Mumbai.

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