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Patrick McGee: Apple Can’t Leave China, With or Without Tariffs

Thought Leader: Patrick McGee
June 3, 2025
Source: Bloomberg
Written by: Catherine Thorbecke

During President Donald Trump’s first term, he famously toured a Texas factory and claimed credit for bringing Apple Inc. production back to America. Except the plant had been running long before he took office. And it was an “unmitigated fiasco.” Workers in China had to be flown in to help fix the mounting manufacturing issues encountered in the US heartland.

This telling anecdote from Apple in China, a gripping read by former Financial Times journalist Patrick McGee, shows how the tech giant became beholden to America’s biggest geopolitical adversary. Up until this point, the book recounts how Apple flew engineers from California to China to train and collaborate with local workers to manufacture its most iconic products.

McGee argues that the technology transfer facilitated by Apple to China, via small decisions compounding over decades, ultimately made it the biggest corporate investor into Made in China 2025, President Xi Jinping’s bold plan to end reliance on Western technology. “Here was America’s most famous tech giant volunteering to play the role of Prometheus, handing the Chinese the gift of fire,” McGee writes.

Yet the overarching argument of the book — that the US company made China into the tech behemoth it is today — begs the question of why Apple didn’t make the same kind of investment in the US. And amid Trump’s second term, when he has repeatedly threatened tariffs on the company if it doesn’t onshore manufacturing, this query has new urgency.

But the reality is that Trump’s nagging will never be able to recreate the ecosystem that local governments in China, with the help of Taiwanese suppliers such as Hon Hai Precision Industry Co., created to lure Apple. A simplistic answer from a scholar early in the book is that China was a “low wages, low welfare and low human rights” nation. Suppliers could exploit a massive underclass of migrant workers, and local authorities could quickly suppress any labor unrest or media reports of it.

If there were any voices I wanted to hear more of in the book, it wasn’t the dozens of Cupertino, California, engineers but these Chinese workers who turned Apple into the $3-trillion-dollar company it is today. (Apple has publicly called claims in the book untrue and full of inaccuracies.)

But if there’s a lesson for Trump — or American consumers — here, it is that electronics manufacturing jobs can come at a high cost for workers. It’s hard to imagine that these are the kinds of positions Trump’s base is hoping for, in an area where automation would be welcome.

China is hardly a low-wage manufacturing base anymore. Apple Chief Executive Officer Tim Cook acknowledged this before, saying that his company produces in the country not because of labor costs but because of its legions of skilled workers.

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