Apple Supplier Foxconn Plans
to Quadruple Workforce for Apple Production
Apple supplier
Foxconn plans
to quadruple the workforce at its iPhone factory
in India over
two years.
Foxconn
has grabbed headlines in recent weeks, with tight virus restrictions at its
Zhengzhou plant, the world's largest iPhone factory, disturbing production and
fuelling concerns over the impact of China's virus policy on global supply
chains.
The
disruptions prompted Apple to lower its forecast for shipments of the premium
iPhone 14 models this week, dampening its sales outlook for the busy year-end
holiday season.
Taiwan-based
Foxconn now plans to boost the workforce at its plant in southern India to
70,000 by adding 53,000 more workers over the next two years, said the sources,
who declined to be named as the discussions are private.
While
the size of the plant in India's southern state of Tamil Nadu is dwarfed by
Foxconn's Zhengzhou plant, which employs 200,000 workers, it is central to
Apple's efforts to shift production away from China.
Foxconn,
formally called Hon Hai Precision Industry Co Ltd, opened the India plant in
2019 and has been ramping up production. It began producing iPhone 14 this
year.
Foxconn's
interest in expanding the facility is known, but the scale of the planned
expansion and timelines have previously not been reported.
Both
Foxconn and Apple declined to comment.
Foxconn
Chairman Liu Young-way said on an earnings call on
Thursday the company would adjust its production capacity and output so there
was no impact from further potential disruptions on supplies for the Christmas
and Lunar New Year holidays.
Foxconn
has shared its plans with Tamil Nadu officials about accelerating its hiring e orts
at the Indian plant due to disruptions in China, said the first government
source.
Beyond
iPhones, the plant also manufactures products for other global tech rms, but
the new hiring push is mainly driven by its need to meet growing iPhone demand,
the person added.
A
person in Taiwan with knowledge of the matter said Foxconn was expanding its
operations in India to increase its capacity for basic models and to meet
Indian demand.
"We
are gradually increasing our production scale there," the person said,
declining to give details on its hiring plans in India.
On
Oct. 27, the state's investment promotion arm tweeted that top government officials
had travelled to Taiwan and met Liu. They had "elaborately discussed
Foxconn's plans for new ventures and investments" and offered the
government's support.
The
state was having discussions with the suppliers to address issues such as
housing facilities for workers as it looked to expand, the first government official
said.
Last
year, Foxconn's Tamil Nadu plant was at the centre of a mass food-poisoning
incident which sparked employee protests and threw light on the living
conditions of the workers in hostels near the factory.
Officials
at Tamil Nadu, a hub of electronic and automotive manufacturing, were also
pushing Apple suppliers to branch out into manufacturing components for iPhones
beyond just assembly, the two government sources added.
Currently,
iPhones are assembled in India by at least three of Apple's global suppliers:
Foxconn and Pegatron in Tamil Nadu; and Wistron in nearby Karnataka state.
JP
Morgan analysts estimated in September that Apple may make one out of four
iPhones in India by 2025, and 25% of all Apple products, including Mac,
iPad,
Apple Watch and AirPods, will be manufactured outside
China by 2025 from 5% currently.