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'Little, little screws' one of many hurdles to US-made iPhones

'Little, little screws' one of many hurdles to US-made iPhones

The Star23-05-2025

FILE PHOTO: A store of Dow Jones Industrial Average stock market index listed company Apple (AAPL) is seen in Los Angeles, California, United States, April 22, 2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
(Reuters) -President Donald Trump's bid to bring manufacturing of Apple's iPhone to the United States faces many legal and economic challenges, experts said on Friday, the least of which are the insertion of "little screws" that would need to be automated.
Trump threatened on Friday to impose a 25% tariff on Apple for any iPhones sold, but not made, in the U.S., as part of his administration's goal of re-shoring jobs.
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick told CBS last month that the work of "millions and millions of human beings screwing in little, little screws to make iPhones" would come to the U.S. and be automated, creating jobs for skilled trade workers such as mechanics and electricians.
But he later told CNBC that Apple CEO Tim Cook told him that doing so requires technology not yet available.
"He said, I need to have the robotic arms, right, do it at a scale and a precision that I could bring it here. And the day I see that available, it's coming here," Lutnick said.
The fastest way for the Trump administration to pressure Apple through tariffs would be to use the same legal mechanism behind punishing tariffs on a broad swath of imports, said trade lawyers and professors.
The law, known as the International Emergency Economic Powers Act, allows the president to take economic action after declaring an emergency that constitutes an unusual and extraordinary threat to the U.S.
"There's no clear legal authority that permits company-specific tariffs, but the Trump administration may try to shoehorn it under its emergency power authorities," said Sally Stewart Liang, a partner at Akin Gump in Washington.
Other means of levying company-specific tariffs rely on lengthy investigations, Liang said.
But tariffs on only Apple "would provide a competitive advantage for other important phones, which undermines Trump's goals of bringing manufacturing to the United States," Liang said.
Experts said Trump has viewed IEEPA as a flexible and powerful economic tool, because it is not clear that courts have the power to review the president's response to a declared emergency.
"In the administration's view, as long as he enacts the ritual of declaring an emergency and pronouncing it unusual or extraordinary, there is nothing a court can do," said Tim Meyer, an international law professor at Duke University.
In a case brought by 12 states challenging Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs in the Manhattan-based Court of International Trade, the court is considering that issue, and whether IEEPA authorizes tariffs at all.
If the Trump administration wins that case, "the president is not going to have any trouble coming up with an emergency as a justification to impose tariffs on Apple iPhone imports," Meyer said.
Trump could even simply include iPhones under the trade deficit emergency that already formed the basis for tariffs declared earlier, Meyer said.
But moving production to the U.S. could take up to a decade and could result in iPhones costing $3,500 each, Dan Ives, an analyst at Wedbush, said in a research note. Apple's top-of-the-line iPhone currently retails for around $1,200.
"We believe the concept of Apple producing iPhones in the US is a fairy tale that is not feasible," Ives said.
Even without getting that far, a tariff on iPhones would increase consumer costs by complicating Apple's supply chain and financing, said Brett House, an economics professor at Columbia.
"None of this is positive for American consumers," he said.
(Reporting by Jody Godoy and Karen Freifeld in New York and David Shepardson in Washington)

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