Foxconn Pulls 300 Chinese Engineers From India; MeitY Sees Only Short-Term Impact: Report

Foxconn Technology Group recently withdrew over 300 Chinese engineers from its Indian operations, and officials familiar with the situation at the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) reportedly expect this to cause only a short-term disturbance.

NDTV Profit reported, citing familiar sources, that the impact is likely to last around a month, and reassured that the situation is under control. Foxconn, a major assembler of Apple’s iPhones, operates several manufacturing units in southern India.

Officials in the report emphasised that India’s workforce is capable of filling the gap, with plans reportedly underway for hiring between 500 and 1,000 local employees in the coming weeks. They also highlighted that domestic capabilities in machine production are improving, which will gradually lessen the country’s reliance on foreign equipment.

Meanwhile, more than 300 experienced workers have recently left Foxconn’s iPhone manufacturing units in southern India, according to a Bloomberg report. While Apple and Foxconn have yet to issue statements, the lack of official commentary amid rising geopolitical strain has drawn considerable attention.

This isn't simply a case of internal workforce rotation. The exits occur as global tech giants accelerate efforts to diversify production away from China, even as diplomatic and trade tensions between New Delhi and Beijing remain unresolved.

For Apple, which has strategically expanded its manufacturing presence in India, the sudden loss of highly trained Chinese personnel poses a significant challenge. These engineers were instrumental not only in device assembly but also in transferring technical know-how and mentoring Indian teams, skills refined over the years in China’s hyper-efficient production hubs.

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China Tightens Its Hold On Tech Talent And Tools

Beijing has in recent months reportedly moved to curb the outflow of skilled labor and critical technology, making it increasingly difficult for companies like Foxconn to relocate top-tier resources. Bloomberg notes that the Chinese government has informally pressured firms to restrict exports of machinery and limit skilled labor migration to rival production hubs such as India and Southeast Asia.

This is widely seen as a pushback against the growing “China Plus One” strategy, where multinational firms seek alternative manufacturing bases to reduce reliance on China amid mounting global uncertainties.

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