Apple Mac proudly American?

File photo: Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, talks about the thinness of the new iMac in San Jose.

File photo: Phil Schiller, Apple's senior vice president of worldwide product marketing, talks about the thinness of the new iMac in San Jose.

Published Dec 7, 2012

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New York - Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company will produce one of its existing lines of Mac computers in the United States next year.

Cook made the comments in part of an interview taped for NBC's “Rock Center,” but aired on Thursday morning on “Today” and posted on the network's website.

In a separate interview with Bloomberg Businessweek, he said that the company will spend $100 million in 2013 to move production of the line to the US from China.

“This doesn't mean that Apple will do it ourselves, but we'll be working with people and we'll be investing our money,” Cook told Bloomberg.

A call to Apple for comment before business hours on Thursday was not immediately returned.

Like most consumer electronics companies, Apple lets contract manufacturers assemble its products overseas. However, the assembly accounts for little of the cost of making a PC or smartphone. Most of the cost lies in buying chips, and many of those are made in the US, Cook noted in his interview with NBC.

The company and its manufacturing partner Foxconn Technology Group have faced significant criticism this year over working conditions at the Chinese facilities where Apple products are assembled, prompting Foxconn to raise salaries.

Cook didn't say which line of computers would be produced in the US or where in the country they would be made. But he told Bloomberg that the production would include more than just final assembly. That suggests that machining of cases and printing of circuit boards could take place in the US.

Regardless, the US manufacturing line is expected to represent just a tiny piece of Apple overall production, with sales of iPhones and iPads now dwarfing those of its computers.

Cook said in his interview with NBC that companies like Apple chose to produce their products in places like China, not because of the lower costs associated with it, but because the manufacturing skills required just aren't present in the US anymore.

He added that the consumer electronics world has never really had a big production presence in the US As a result, it's really more about starting production in the US than bringing it back.

Apple originally made its computers in the US It started outsourcing production in the mid-90s, first by selling some plants to contract manufacturers, then by hiring manufacturers overseas. It assembled iMacs in Elk Grove, California, until 2004. - Sapa-AP

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