Skip to main content

iPhone builder Foxconn just replaced 60,000 employees with robots

foxconn wisconsin manufacturing plant news iphone builder robots header
Apple
A Foxconn factory’s workforce today shrunk from 110,000 employees down to 50,000, according to a report from the South China Morning Post. Why? Because robots can do the same job.

Foxconn is Apple’s primary manufacturing partner, and there is a fear that other factories in the Chinese city of Kunshan will do the same thing, something that could have a disastrous impact on the population of the area, which is largely made up of migrant workers. In fact, according to the report as many as 600 companies in the area have plans to rely more on automation.

Recommended Videos

Foxconn has been working toward replacing workers with robots for a while now, obviously in an attempt to save money and increase profits. Sure, the robots are expensive up front, but over time they’re far cheaper than hiring and employing workers. It’s not known exactly which products are manufactured at the Kunshan plant. However, The Post says that companies in the area made 51 million laptops and 20 million smartphones last year.

Over time, Foxconn plants are going to get increasingly automated — not just to save money, but also to continue to meet Apple’s demands. Foxconn regularly hires extra workers to meet the demand when a new iPhone launches.

Foxconn has made headlines in the past for how it treats its employees, and Apple has received much of the backlash. Back in 2012 Apple began investigating the working conditions at Foxconn factories, prompting Foxconn to start improving those conditions.

Of course, it’s not like Apple is uninterested in robots itself. The company recently unveiled a new robot it calls Liam, which is designed to quickly tear down used devices so that their parts can be recycled. Other companies are likely to follow suit. Former McDonald’s CEO Ed Rensi recently said that a raise in the minimum wage would cause companies to invest in robot workers.

“It’s cheaper to buy a $35,000 robotic arm than it is to hire an employee who is inefficient, making $15 an hour bagging French fries,” said Rensi in an interview with Fox Business.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
We just learned a lot about the iPhone 17. Here’s what you need to know
The back of a Natural Titanium iPhone 15 Pro Max.

We’ve just gotten one of our biggest leaks yet about next year’s iPhone 17 lineup. Even though the iPhone 16 hasn’t launched yet, leaker Ice Universe posted a slew of information on Weibo laying out the anticipated iPhone 17 models and some of their key specs, display size, and price points.

For the upcoming lineup, you’re looking at the following five devices:

Read more
Apple just warned some iPhone users about a dangerous spyware attack
The back of the iPhone 15 Pro Max.

Apple is warning iPhone users in 98 countries to be on the lookout for potential mercenary spyware attacks. According to TechCrunch, this is the company's second such warning in 2024.

Folks in the affected countries are receiving the following message from Apple: "Apple detected that you are being targeted by a mercenary spyware attack that is trying to remotely compromise the iPhone associated with your Apple ID -xxx-."

Read more
Apple’s AI features for the iPhone just hit a major roadblock
Summarization of notification and emails on iPhone with Apple Intelligence.

Earlier this week, the EU’s competition chief, Margrethe Vestager, told CNBC that Apple had some “very serious” issues as it tries to comply with the landmark Digital Markets Act (DMA) tech legislation. These were the rules that finally forced Apple to open iPhones for alternative app stores, allow external browser engines, and enable third-party payment options, among other things. It seems those rules also mean the best of iOS 18 won’t make it to the EU bloc either.

Apple has confirmed that a trio of crucial iPhone upgrades that it announced at WWDC 2024 earlier this month won't appear on iPhones in the EU later this year. The biggest of those would be Apple Intelligence, the suite of AI features deeply integrated within iOS 18 that are aimed at redefining what iPhones can do in the age of generative AI tools like Google’s Gemini and Microsoft’s Copilot.

Read more