Trump's Tariff Tensions: Apple, iPhones, and the American Manufacturing Dream
President Trump's initiative to relocate iPhone manufacturing to the U.S. using tariffs faces significant legal hurdles and economic ramifications. Experts question the feasibility, citing technological and cost barriers. The potential tariffs aim to promote domestic jobs, but could increase consumer prices and are challenged in court.

President Donald Trump's ambitious drive to bring Apple's iPhone manufacturing back to American soil encounters multiple legal and economic obstacles, experts assessed on Friday. Among these challenges is the necessity of technology yet to be achieved, such as precise automated processes to replace detailed manual work.
Trump announced plans to impose a 25% tariff on smartphones not produced in America, targeting Apple and other competitors like Samsung, effective by June's end. His aim is to bolster the domestic job market by reshoring manufacturing roles, primarily reliant on advanced trade skills.
The initiative leans on the International Emergency Economic Powers Act to justify these tariffs. Yet, critics argue the act's authority is ambiguous in authorizing company-specific tariffs, questioning the effectiveness of such an approach in both legal arenas and practical industry realities.
(With inputs from agencies.)
- READ MORE ON:
- Trump
- Apple
- iPhones
- tariffs
- manufacturing
- United States
- jobs
- economy
- courts
- legal
ALSO READ
Budget 2025: NZ Govt Focuses on Growth, Jobs and Cost of Living Relief
AI threatens one in four jobs – but transformation, not replacement, is the real risk
Alpex Solar Reports Multi-Fold Profit Surge, Eyes Solar Cell Manufacturing
Reliance Defence Partners with Rheinmetall to Strengthen India's Defence Manufacturing
RenewSys Expands Manufacturing Motor: Driving Solar Innovation