What Trump’s Apple threat means for India’s tariff negotiations

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Officials in New Delhi are not entirely sure what to make of Mr Trump’s remarks about Apple.

Officials in New Delhi are not entirely sure what to make of US President Donald Trump’s remarks about Apple.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Alex Travelli

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Even after President Donald Trump hit it with a 26 per cent tariff, India had reason to be hopeful about trade negotiations with the US.

China was facing even higher import taxes. So were smaller Asian countries whose exports compete with India, like Vietnam and Bangladesh. That positioned India to use the trade war to advance its goal of luring the business that was expected to flee its giant neighbour. Plus, India’s Prime Minister

Narendra Modi had a cosy relationship with Mr Trump.

Things are looking tougher for India now and for its American business partners. Mr Trump has changed up his tactics with China, backing off his highest tariffs. That wrong-footed India, which now faces tariffs not much lower than China’s.

Then he threw a wrench into

India’s relationship with Apple

, the single most striking example of an American company that re-oriented its production away from Chinese suppliers.

A few years ago, nearly every iPhone was assembled in China. By the end of 2025, an estimated 25 per cent or more will be made in India. Last week, Mr Trump said he does not see that as progress and Apple’s production should skip India and move to the US instead.

India is working to secure a reduction in

the 26 per cent tariff

, which he paused until early July to give the countries time to talk. Officials in New Delhi are not entirely sure what to make of his remarks about Apple. But they have complicated an already complex negotiation before the tariff reprieve ends.

Indian officials were in Washington this week, trying to hash out a deal. Commerce minister Piyush Goyal had hopped back and forth from New Delhi twice since Mr Trump was re-elected.

On May 20, after wrapping up a meeting with his American counterpart Howard Lutnick, Mr Goyal posted on social media that he was “expediting the first tranche of India-US bilateral trade agreement”. With the word “tranche”, he dropped a clue that India sees any agreement playing out as a series.

But there is no certainty about the path for the talks, as the past 10 days have made frustratingly clear in New Delhi.

Before he added Apple to the chaotic dynamic, Mr Trump conflated India’s trade negotiations with its recent conflict with its nuclear-armed neighbour Pakistan. Indian diplomats were frustrated when the American President claimed the credit for brokering a ceasefire and then offered to step into their dangerous dispute over the region of Kashmir.

India’s government was made even more unhappy when he then inserted trade into his account of the peacemaking.

“I said, ‘Come on, we’re going to do a lot of trade with you guys,’” he said on May 12. “People have never really used trade the way I used it.”

A senior Indian official denied that trade had even been discussed.

Then, on May 15, Mr Trump demanded that Apple stop its years-long efforts to reduce its reliance on China and make iPhones in India.

“I told Tim Cook, ‘We’re not interested in you building in India. They can take care of themselves; you up your production’” in the US, he said, referring to Apple’s chief executive.

The demand is a slap in the face for India, a close US partner that for many American companies has been an increasingly viable location to lessen their dependence on China.

Ever since the Covid-19 pandemic, global businesses that depend on China have been looking for ways to pare the risk of relying too much on one big country. India assured its American friends that it could take up the slack.

No country can match China for its extensive and efficient factories, and Apple’s roots there are deep. So it is a point of pride for many in Indian government and business that Apple has shifted some of its iPhone assembly. The idea that Apple could redirect its manufacturing capacity from China straight to the US – bypassing India – caused a collective double take.

Apple did not respond to a request to comment.

“Everyone wants manufacturing at home,” said Mr Prachir Singh, an analyst in India for Counterpoint Research, which covers technology companies. But that is much easier said than done.

“If you talk about iPhones, there are more than 1,000 components. It took almost a decade for Apple to set up such a supply chain in China,” Mr Singh said. “And it took more than five years to reach some capacity here.”

Several factors went into making parts of India competitive with China’s manufacturing marvel.

In the southern state of Tamil Nadu, at the heart of Apple’s supply chain in India, the local government has helped companies like Foxconn, the Taiwanese giant that has made iPhones in China for years, by building workers’ dormitories and providing other China-style infrastructure. India’s national government has been subsidising the manufacture of high-tech goods since 2020.

Labour costs are low across India. Local trade unions in Tamil Nadu estimate that the average monthly salary was equivalent to US$233 (S$300). Wages even for jobs that require engineering degrees are competitive enough with costs in China.

Finally, companies like Foxconn have helped local businesses upgrade the value chain in India, by building more of the iPhone’s components in India. That creates what factory managers call an ecosystem: dense clusters of talent and supply that are starting to give India the kind of industrial edge that China showed more than 20 years ago.

Two people in contact with the Indian trade negotiators, requesting anonymity to discuss sensitive matters, said they did not believe that India was at risk of losing Apple’s business. They added that it was unthinkable to them that the US would be ready to compete with India’s advantages in manufacturing.

Instead, they said, it must be a bargaining tactic. NYTIMES

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