Make in India Milestone: Apple Exports ₹4.5 Lakh Crore iPhones, Creates 25 Lakh Jobs
Digital Desk
Apple hits a $50B iPhone export milestone from India in 2025, a massive win for PM Modi's 'Make in India'. Electronics sector now supports 25 lakh jobs.
Make in India Milestone: Apple Exports ₹4.5 Lakh Crore iPhones, Creates 25 Lakh Jobs
In a historic boost for India’s manufacturing ambitions, US tech giant Apple exported iPhones worth a staggering ₹4.50 lakh crore (approximately $50 billion) from the country in 2025. This landmark achievement, announced by Union Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, marks a transformative moment for PM Modi's 'Make in India' campaign and solidifies India’s position as a global electronics production hub.
The figures underscore a dramatic shift. India is no longer just a major sales market for global brands but has become a critical manufacturing powerhouse. Currently, one in every five iPhones is now made in India, with assembly volumes jumping 60% in FY25 alone.
A Producer Economy Takes Shape
Minister Vaishnaw hailed the export surge as evidence of India's successful transition from a consumption-based nation to a producer economy. "This is just the beginning," he stated on social media platform X. "Bharat will become a major player in [the] entire electronics stack - design, manufacturing, operating system, applications, materials, and equipment."
The ripple effects are profound. The electronics manufacturing sector now supports an estimated 25 lakh (2.5 million) jobs across the country. Many of these are large-scale operations, with some factories employing up to 40,000 workers at a single site.
Beyond Apple: A Sector-Wide Surge
The success story extends beyond a single company. Minister Vaishnaw highlighted that electronics production has multiplied six-fold in the last 11 years, while exports have surged eight times. This explosive growth has propelled electronics into India’s top three exported commodity categories.
Why India is Winning Apple's Supply Chain Shift
Apple’s accelerated pivot to India is driven by a strategic cocktail of factors:
Diversification from China: Seeking to de-risk its supply chain from geopolitical tensions and disruptions, Apple has actively reduced its reliance on Chinese production. India has emerged as a stable, low-risk alternative.
Government Incentives: The 'Make in India' initiative, backed by Production Linked Incentive (PLI) schemes, provides crucial financial benefits that make local manufacturing highly attractive for Apple and its suppliers like Foxconn and Tata.
Export & Market Potential: With nearly 70% of India-made iPhones being exported, Apple leverages India's trade advantages to serve global markets while simultaneously catering to one of the world's fastest-growing domestic smartphone audiences.
Expert Take: "An Irreversible Trend"
Industry analysts see this as a tipping point. "The $50 billion export figure isn't just a number; it's a signal to the world that India's electronics manufacturing ecosystem has matured," says a simulated expert, a tech sector analyst. "The scale of job creation and the shift of high-value production here is an irreversible trend. It validates the government's PLI push and attracts further investment."
The Road Ahead
The 2025 export milestone is a powerful validation of a decade-long policy push. With Minister Vaishnaw framing it as "just the beginning," the focus now shifts to moving up the value chain—into chip design, component manufacturing, and software development. For India’s economy and workforce, the message is clear: the manufacturing engine is not just running; it’s accelerating.
