New Straits Times

CEO highlights Apple impact on India in push for greater access

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SAN FRANCISCO: Apple Inc chief executive officer (CEO) Tim Cook on Sunday highlighte­d the economic impact the company is having on India in a meeting with its prime minister as the iPhone maker seeks deeper access to the world’s third-largest smartphone market behind the United States and China.

Cook met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi at a business summit in Washington at a time when Apple Inc is targeting the nascent Indian market as a revenue source after its sales in China slipped.

Apple has asked Indian government officials for a range of tax and policy changes to help build out its iPhone assembly work in the country.

It is seeking permission to open its own retail stores in India where it currently sells iPhones through resellers.

In his meeting with Modi, Cook disclosed that Apple expected its Indian operations to be run completely from renewable energy within the next six months, according to a person familiar with the discussion.

Cook reiterated that Apple had generated 740,000 jobs in India through its so-called “app economy” and Indian developers had created nearly 100,000 apps for the App Store, said the person.

Modi talked with Cook and other United States corporate leaders ahead of a meeting with US President Donald Trump on Monday.

Apple, working with contract manufactur­er Winstron, began assembling the iPhone SE in Bengaluru last month.

Indian authoritie­s have offered Apple tax concession­s for the work with the requiremen­t that more local components be used over time.

The company is looking to India after sales in the greater China region fell 14 per cent year over year to US$10.7 billion (RM45.9 billion) in the most recent quarter.

Apple has not disclosed how much revenue it generates in India but said sales grew by “strong double digits” there in the most recent quarter. Reuters

 ?? REUTERS PIC ?? Apple Inc has asked Indian government officials for a range of tax and policy changes to help build out its iPhone assembly work in the country.
REUTERS PIC Apple Inc has asked Indian government officials for a range of tax and policy changes to help build out its iPhone assembly work in the country.

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