India’s Tata to add up to 45,000 workers at iPhone parts plant

India’s fledgling electronics industry is trying to capitalise on China’s challenges to cope with the pandemic. PHOTO: REUTERS

NEW DELHI - Tata Group is planning to multiply the number of employees at its electronics factory in southern India that makes iPhone components, adding tens of thousands of workers as part of a push to win more business from Apple.

The plant in the industrial town of Hosur, in Tamil Nadu state, will hire as many as 45,000 female workers within 18 to 24 months as it sets up new production lines, people in the know said.

The factory, which produces iPhone housings or the cases that hold the device together, now employs about 10,000 workers, mostly women.

The salt-to-software conglomerate is among Indian companies trying to benefit from Apple diversifying its supply chain beyond China.

While just a small fraction of iPhones and its parts are made in India, the country is making inroads with its push to challenge China as its neighbour faces Covid-19-related lockdowns and political tensions with the US.

The Hosur plant, spread over more than 500 acres, in September hired about 5,000 women, including those from indigenous tribal communities, the people said.

Indian companies are seeking to hire more women to improve the country’s gender imbalance in the workforce.

Tata and Apple representatives did not respond to e-mails seeking comment.

Women at the Hosur factory get gross salaries of just over US$194 (S$270) a month, nearly 40 per cent more than the Indian industry average for employees who use hands or tools for assembly, according to the people.

The workers are given free food and lodging within the campus, the people said, adding that Tata also plans to provide training and education.

India’s fledgling electronics industry is trying to capitalise on China’s challenges in coping with the coronavirus pandemic.

Apple’s main manufacturing partner, Foxconn Technology Group, is grappling with mounting concern that a Covid-19 flare-up at its main Chinese plant could hurt production ahead of the all-important holiday shopping season.

To diversify beyond China, Foxconn and fellow Taiwanese contract manufacturers Wistron Corp and Pegatron Corp have ramped up iPhone output in India – a move also boosted by Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s financial incentives programme. That has helped to increase iPhone exports from the South Asian country.

Adding more local component manufacturing would also bolster India’s effort to expand deeper into the technology supply chain.

Competing iPhone housing suppliers include Lens Technology, Jabil and Lingyi iTech Guangdong, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Separately, Tata Group is in talks with Wistron to establish an electronics manufacturing joint venture, seeking to assemble iPhones in India, people familiar with the matter said in September. BLOOMBERG

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