Apple CEO Tim Cook’s pledge to make Macs in the U.S. seen adding 200 jobs

“The pledge by Apple Inc. Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook to invest in making Mac computers in the U.S. will probably create about 200 jobs if he follows the pattern of companies such as Lenovo Group Ltd. and LG Chem Ltd.,” Jeff Green, Adam Satariano and Peter Burrows report for Bloomberg.

“Cook, who took over from Steve Jobs last year, said in an interview with Bloomberg Businessweek that Apple will work with partners on the project and put in at least $100 million of its own money. Outside involvement may increase the total,” Green, Satariano and Burrows report. “The investment ‘sounds like a 200-job operation with about a million-unit output,’ said Dan Luria, a labor economist at Michigan Manufacturing Technology Center in Plymouth, Michigan, who studies factory operations. Apple will probably rely on tax breaks and other incentives for the facility, he said.”

Green, Satariano and Burrows report, “Foxconn Technology Group, the Chinese maker of Apple’s iPhone and other products, is a likely partner on the Mac investment, said Michael Hasler, associate academic director for the Supply Chain Management Center of Excellence at the University of Texas, a state where Apple already has operations.”

Read more in the full article here.

Related articles:
Apple’s ‘Made in USA’ computer likely to be Mac Pro – December 8, 2012
Apple’s return of Mac production to U.S. next year to go well beyond mere assembly – December 7, 2012
Why Apple is bringing manufacturing back to the United States – December 6, 2012
Apple CEO Tim Cook announces plans to manufacture Macs in USA; says TV is ‘area of intense interest’ inside Apple – December 6, 2012

32 Comments

    1. Perhaps you are thinking that there will be just one assembly line and very very fast people working on it. Maybe it is possible to have many lines with robotic equipment doing the assembly and 200 people maintaining it.

    2. Of course they don’t know – only Apple knows. They are simply guessing.

      My guess is that Apple will create a highly automated robotic assembly plant and will move away from relying on vast numbers of relatively unskilled workers.

      They will then use the knowledge acquired from that process to repeat the same sort of operation on a bigger scale elsewhere and then continue scaling up the process for further products. Those robotic assembly plants could be located virtually anywhere in the world, either for economic, political or logistic reasons and it might make sense to have more than one plant making popular products so that production continuity can be maintained if unpredictable events happen ( freak weather, political unrest, transport disruption etc ).

      1. Having a mostly automated production facility would also have the added benefit of reducing the likelihood of spy shot product leaks. Won’t eliminate the chance 100% but still, a good thing for the Apple marketing team

    3. Why wouldn’t it be highly automated/robotic? We are talking about a brand new manufacturing facility built by Apple in 2013 in America. I expect it to be the most automated/robotic facility of it’s kind in the world.

      They surely aren’t manufacturing in America for cheap human labor.

  1. 200 jobs.
    Does that include plant drivers, custodians, building maintenance, cafeteria employees, security, restaurants and cafes and coffee shops nearby which will serve the employees directly employed at the plant, cab drivers, bus drivers, road maintenance crews, etc., etc., etc.?

  2. Oh please, the company executive who’s saying “200 jobs” is from Flextronics. Remember them?

    They’re the ones who got in trouble with Apple for leaking secrets just last year and whose executive pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and one count of security fraud.

    Why can’t the media get someone a little more trustworthy and less conflicted?

  3. Maybe this is apple’s first step into manufacturing, the one area that Samsung has a distinct advantage. Having complete manufacturing control over the non commoditized components(processors, displays, etc.) would help to reduce supply constraints & improve margins so this would seem like a great way to use its cash hoard on. Though this will not be an easy task to undertake. Horace Dedui’s latest article seems to be alluding to this next move for apple. If apple were able to pull this off in the next few years, where would all the FUD stories target :)?

  4. The MacPro, or similar Tower workstation, could be made on a very automated assembly line domestically. A few large contract manufacturers in China are investing in the same manufacturing process technologies. The idea is to assemble machines using robotic machines. From what I’ve seen it will require several groups of people with experience in Mechatronics to successfully design and automate several assembly lines. There would be significant savings in shipping costs domestically, probably a few tax breaks, the ability to better control quality, respond faster to custom orders demand, and even to modify existing components on demand. The benefits list is much longer than I or most people could fully understand, but its possible and its a start.

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