Khaleej Times

Apple stresses on its role in US economy to counter criticism

- Michael Liedtke and Christophe­r S. Rugaber

san francisco — Apple is getting more aggressive about emphasisin­g its role in the US economy, apparently hoping to counter recurring criticism over its reliance on overseas factories.

On Wednesday, Apple for the first time released a state-by-state breakdown of where its 80,000 US employees work, showing that more than half of them are located outside Silicon Valley. It also announced a $1 billion fund aimed at creating more US manufactur­ing jobs, although it provided few details.

The strategy appears aimed at complicati­ng efforts by President Donald Trump and other politician­s to vilify Apple for using companies in China and elsewhere to assemble most of its products. Apple had no comment on political ramificati­ons of its announceme­nts.

CEO Tim Cook first described the manufactur­ing fund an interview on CNBC, but didn’t say how the money will be disbursed or who will be eligible to receive it. Apple will provide more details when it announces its first investment by the end of the month, he said. Apple’s initial billion-dollar investment amounts to a tiny fraction of its $257 billion in cash.

Cook also promised that Apple will hire “thousands of employees, thousands more in the future” in the US, although he didn’t specify how quickly that will happen. Apple’s US payroll has grown roughly 40-fold since 1998, when it had 5,000 US workers.

Cook also said Apple is examining ways to help more people learn the programmin­g skills to make apps. Trump has threatened to impose tariffs on products from Chi-

$1b fund aimed at creating more US manufactur­ing jobs

na, a change that would drive up Apple’s costs. That could pressure the company to raise its prices at a time when it is already having trouble increasing its sales of iPhones and iPads.

“They are trying to make the case that they really do have a lot of folks working in the US,” said technology industry analyst Rob Enderle. “So if you want to pick on somebody, you might want to pick on somebody else because they won’t be a good example.” Cook isn’t the only CEO who has been trying to highlight his company’s hiring and expansion plans in the US Trump has attacked many companies, frequently on Twitter, for moving jobs out of the US and lavishly praised those who have announced major

9,000 suppliers listed by Apple in US

There is a lot of political pressure to create jobs in the United States Diane Swonk, CEO of DS Economics

hiring initiative­s. As a result, many companies, including Exxon Mobil, Intel, Charter Communicat­ions and Ford Motor, have unveiled big hiring plans, though in many cases they were already in the works before the presidenti­al campaign.

“There is a lot of political pressure to create jobs in the United States,” Diane Swonk, CEO of DS Economics, said. Chief executives “do not want to show up in a tweet.”

Since 2014, Apple has issued a series of reports intended to underscore its contributi­ons to US jobs and economic growth. Its first report came after years of complaints about labor practices and suicides at Foxconn, one of the company’s major contractor­s in China, drew more attention to Apple’s reliance on overseas factories. Apple to also issues a separate “supplier responsibi­lity” report reviewing the labor conditions in those facilities. The Wednesday report on US jobs is its fourth update, but the first to include a state-by-state breakdown of Apple employees. Unsurprisi­ngly, the numbers show its highest concentrat­ion of workers (36,786) is located in California, home to the company’s Silicon Valley headquarte­rs and 53 stores. Apple’s second biggest employment center is in Texas (8,407 jobs), where it has a corporate campus and 18 stores. Its smallest pockets of employment are in North Dakota (four jobs), Vermont (six) and Wyoming (seven).

Apple’s decision to provide detailed informatio­n about the locations of its US employees could help the company win support from lawmakers eager to protect jobs in their states, Enderle said. “It gives senators something to push back with, recognizin­g that Apple is a real risky company to target anyway because its products are so popular with people.”

Besides showing how many of its full-time and part-time employees work in each state, Apple also lists where its 9,000 US suppliers are located. The company says it spent more than $50 billion at its US suppliers last year, helping them employ a total of 450,000 workers.

The company also cited a study by the Progressiv­e Policy Institute that attributes 1.5 million US jobs to Apple’s iPhone “ecosystem.” That figure not only includes programmer­s that work on the apps, but also supporting staff and employees working everywhere from banks to restaurant­s that have jobs because of the spending generated by apps.

Such “spillover” effects are widely recognized, although economists sometimes spar over their magnitude. But for a company to claim credit for all or most of the jobs in a particular industry is a stretch, Swonk said. The vast majority of app developers, for example, also produce apps for Android phones from Samsung and other manufactur­ers.

The Public Policy Institute only found 1.7 million jobs in the entire “app economy” — and 1.35 million of those were associated with Android apps.

Most of those overlap with the jobs linked to Apple. — AP

 ?? — AP ?? Tim Cook hinted Apple’s initial billion-dollar investment amounts to a tiny fraction of its $257b.
— AP Tim Cook hinted Apple’s initial billion-dollar investment amounts to a tiny fraction of its $257b.

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