Blitz Bureau
Apple’s deepening engagement with India, symbolised by the expansion of iPhone production in Chennai’s Foxconn plant, is more than a business decision — it’s a global signal. India, once peripheral to high-end manufacturing, is edging closer to the centre of the global value chain. Yet, this opportunity comes not without constraints, and India’s challenge now is to turn momentum into maturity.
The shift in Apple’s strategy reflects a broader reordering of global supply chains. Rising US-China tensions, pandemic-era disruptions, and an emerging multipolar world have compelled companies to prioritise resilience over mere cost efficiency. India’s appeal lies not just in its scale and cost advantages, but in its alignment with geopolitical imperatives and its promise of reform. However, constraints remain — and they are formidable.
Land acquisition delays, patchy power supply, inconsistent policy implementation, and still-burdensome regulatory regimes continue to test investor patience. While India’s ‘China Plus One’ advantage is real, Vietnam, Mexico, and Indonesia offer nimbler ecosystems in some respects. India’s bureaucracy, though improving, is still prone to slowdowns, and cross-border logistics remain subpar. Skill mismatches and limited R&D capacity further compound these challenges.
Yet, the solutions are visible — and increasingly being acted upon. The Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes, now a cornerstone of India’s industrial strategy, offer performance-based support that investors value. Coupled with state-level industrial corridors and fast-track approvals, a more competitive landscape is emerging. More importantly, the Indian government’s drive to digitise public services, simplify labour laws, and improve the logistics backbone is slowly paying dividends.
What India must now ensure is depth. Final assembly alone will not create a resilient ecosystem. India needs to invest in capabilities upstream — semiconductors, precision components, robotics, and materials science. Skill development must match the scale of ambition. States must compete not just in incentives but in governance, infrastructure, and urban liveability. Coordination between the Centre and states is essential to avoid policy overlap and friction.
Apple’s move is transformative – it creates jobs, drives ancillary growth, and demands higher standards. But it’s not an endgame. For India to truly reposition itself as a global manufacturing powerhouse, consistency, collaboration, and long-term vision are critical.
This is a second chance India cannot afford to squander. The world is watching — and this time, it’s watching with intent. Whether the Chennai model becomes a national story will depend on how India balances ambition with execution.


