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When asked by an analyst about President Donald Trump's claim that Apple had promised to build “three, big beautiful plants” in the US, Apple CEO Tim Cook managed to talk about almost everything other than Trump.
“We have created 2 million jobs in the U.S., and we're incredibly proud of that. We do view that we have a responsibility in the U.S. to increase economic activity, including increasing jobs,” Cook said during the company's Q3 2017 earnings call.
He went on to detail what Apple does economically in the US, including how the iOS platform supports the jobs of hundreds of thousands app developers. As for the manufacturing plants specifically, Cook was pointedly non-committal, neither addressing Trump's claim or specifically refuting it.
Instead, he noted that in 2016 Apple bought “$50 billion worth of goods and services from U.S.-based suppliers” including goods like high-tech glass that is then shipped to China where iPhones are manufactured by Apple partners.
He also mentioned that Apple's “Advanced Manufacturing Fund,” which will put at least $1 billion into US companies, had invested $200 million into Corning, the Kentucky-based Apple glass supplier. As for new manufacturing plants specifically, the closest Cook would get to discussing it was saying that it was “probable” that “several plants… can benefit from having some investment to grow or expand or even maybe set up shop in the U.S. for the first time.”
Trump said last week in an interview with the Wall Street Journal “he’s promised me three big plants – big, big, big.”
When pushed for followup, Trump said, according to a full transcript published today by Politico: “We’ll have to see. You can call him. But I said, Tim, unless you start building your plants in this country, I won’t consider my administration an economic success, OK? And he’s called me and he says, you know, they’re going forward, three big, beautiful plants. You’ll have to call him. I mean, maybe he won’t tell you what he tells me, but I believe he will do that. I really believe it.”
Apple declined to comment when the Wall Street Journal first published Trump's comments on Apple last week.
Apple has 80,000 US employees and claims that it supports about 2 million US jobs, including people employed at its suppliers and in the “App Store ecosystem.” While the company does some manufacturing in the US — the Mac Pro is made in Austin, Texas for example — most takes place via a vast network of international manufacturing partners.
Trump is not the first US president to push Apple executives to bring more of its manufacturing to its home country. Then-president Barack Obama asked Steve Jobs in 2011 what would have to change for Apple to make iPhones in the US.
Jobs' response, according to the New York Times: “Those jobs aren’t coming back.”
Quelle: <a href="Apple CEO Successfully Avoids Discussing Trump When Asked About Trump“>BuzzFeed
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