*** THE NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER ***
âAbsolutely rivetingâ Peter Frankopan, author of The Silk Roads
âDisturbing and enlighteningâ Chris Miller, author of Chip War
âHugely importantâ Rana Foroohar, author of Makers and Takers
âA once-in-a-generation readâ Robert D. Kaplan, author of Waste Land
As Trump wages a tariff war with China, seeking to boost domestic electronics manufacturing, this book offers an unparalleled insight into why his strategy is embarrassingly naĂŻve.
Apple isnât just a brand; itâs the worldâs most valuable company and creator of the 21st centuryâs defining product. The iPhone has revolutionized the way we live, work and connect. But Apple is now a victim of its own success, caught in the middle of a new Cold War between two superpowers.
On the brink of bankruptcy in 1996, Apple adopted an outsourcing strategy. By 2003 it was lured to China by the promise of affordable, ubiquitous labour. As the iPod and iPhone transformed Appleâs fortunes, their sophisticated production played a seminal role in financing, training, supervising and supplying Chinese manufacturers â skills Beijing is now weaponizing against the West.
Investigative journalist Patrick McGee draws on 200 interviews with former Apple executives and engineers to reveal how Cupertinoâs choice to anchor its supply chain in China has increasingly made it vulnerable to the regimeâs whims. Both an insiderâs historical account and a cautionary tale, Apple in China is the first history of Apple to go beyond the biographies of its top executives and set the iPhoneâs global domination within an increasingly fraught geopolitical context.