Foxconn reportedly plans to set up manufacturing plants in US

“Foxconn Electronics (Hon Hai Precision Industry) reportedly plans to establish manufacturing plants in the US and is currently conducting evaluations in cities such as Detroit and Los Angeles, according to market watchers,” Ninelu Tu and Joseph Tsai report for DigiTimes. “Since the manufacturing of Apple’s products is rather complicated, the market watchers expect the rumored plants to focus on LCD TV production, which can be highly automated and easier.”

Tu and Tsai report, “Meanwhile, Foxconn chairman Terry Guo, at a recent public event, noted that the company is planning a training program for US-based engineers… [to provide] an environment to learn the Chinese language, first-hand expereince in the manufacturing process, and a training… Foxconn is already in discussion with Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) over such a program, Gou disclosed.”

Read more in the full article here.

23 Comments

        1. With 134 billion dollars by Jan 2013, you are in any business you want to be in. If the companies Apple gets screens, cpu’s, and casings from continue to become more unreliable then what? go out of business? Sharp, Samdung, LG, and Intel will ultimately make the decision for Apple.

      1. Right. Because Republicans believe Taiwan should be its own sovereign state and that we should publicly declare as much. I would say Democrats believe the first part as well, but not the second.

  1. “Since the manufacturing of Apple’s products is rather complicated, the market watchers expect the rumored plants to focus on LCD TV production, which can be highly automated and easier.”

    That is a sad commentary on the expertise of US manufacturing.

    1. I read that differently. I read it to mean that FoxConn would not try to bring manufacturing jobs that are manual labor intensive (such as the long line of people you see on a manufacturing line in FoxConn photos performing menial, repetitive tasks) which would be cost prohibitive in the US given the wage differential. As Steve Jobs told Obama, “those jobs aren’t coming back.” What we want and need are higher skill, higher paying jobs.

      There are areas (such as aerospace and microchips) where there is still tremendous expertise in US manufacturing.

      1. @Brian “I read that differently”. Thanks for your point of view. I also read it from the “negative” point of view, but after reading your opinion I think you are right, and more importantly, you just gave me a good feeling of hope.

        Thanks.

    2. I don’t think it has anything to do with our manufacturing ability. I mean look at the aircraft industry – highly complex machines that require very tight tolerances and we make many of them right here in the USA.

      I think it has more to do with finding enough people who would work for the low wages these jobs offer.

      1. It will be highly educated people and a lot of semi-automatic and automated manufacturing, with few low level employees who do minimal skill jobs.

        Even warehouse operations are automated in lots of places.

        These types of high tech manufacturing offer educated persons a source of work that we need and need more of to keep up and compete in the world.

        There is no other way, unless you accept going the way of Rome and the English Empire where people sit around and watch the collapse rather than creating new and better products.

        1. Agreed though its the British Empire. Sadly listening to many on your side of the pond reminds me so much of Britain in the sixties so beware. Which is why it worries me so much that a company like Apple engenders so much suspicion in Wall Street while old outdated plodders gain so much leeway.

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