OM in the News: Can Apple Change Its Supply Chain?

President Trump recently demanded Apple and other smartphone makers like Samsung make their phones in the U.S. or face a 25% tariff, reports CNN Business (May 23, 2025). But Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, says its plan is to manufacture iPhones set to be sold here at newly built plants in India, stating “the majority of iPhones sold in the U.S. will have India as their country of origin.”

Unlike Apple, Samsung doesn’t rely on China for smartphone production. The South Korean giant closed its last phone factory in China in 2019. The vast majority of its smartphone manufacturing takes place in South Korea, Vietnam, India and Brazil.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent stated: “I think that one of our greatest vulnerabilities are external production, especially in semiconductors, and a large part of Apple’s components are in semiconductors. So we would like to have Apple help us make the semiconductor supply chain more secure.”

The world’s most valuable publicly traded company is flush with cash and rakes in tremendous profit — more than any company in history. But Apple has long contended that it cannot manufacture iPhones here. It has instead invested billions of dollars training millions of skilled engineers abroad, claiming China and India simply have more skilled engineers–and that they cost significantly less.

In 2010, Steve Jobs, Apple’s late CEO, called America’s education system an obstacle for Apple, which needed 30,000 industrial engineers to support its on-site factory workers. “If you could educate these engineers, we could move more manufacturing plants here,” he told then-President Obama.

So, can Apple reshore  iPhone production? The notion is a “fictional tale,” says tech exec Dan Ives at Wedbush Securities. “U.S.-made iPhones could cost more than 3 times their current price of $1,000, because it would be necessary to replicate the highly complex production ecosystem that currently exists in Asia. You build that supply chain in the U.S. with a fab in West Virgina and New Jersey, they’ll be $3,500 iPhones. And even then, it would cost Apple about $30 billion and three years to move just 10% of its supply chain to the US to begin with.”

While moving iPhone production to the U.S. may not be possible, Apple did announce a $500 billion investment to expand its U.S. facilities earlier this year, in an effort to appease the President.

Classroom discussion questions:

  1. Is it true that China and India have more engineering talent than the U.S.?
  2. Discuss the pros and cons of reshoring iPhone production from an OM perspective.

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