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Apple Offers $100 Million Investment to End Indonesia's iPhone 16 Ban

Apple has significantly raised its proposed investment in Indonesia to $100 million, a tenfold increase from its initial $10 million offer reported earlier this month. The new proposal aims to convince Indonesian authorities to lift their ban on iPhone 16 sales.

iPhone 16 Apple Store
According to Bloomberg, the increased investment would be spread over two years. However, Indonesia's Ministry of Industry is reportedly now pushing Apple to direct more of the investment toward smartphone research and development within the country.

Indonesia blocked iPhone 16 sales in October after determining that Apple had not met the country's 40% domestic content requirement for smartphones. The government also claims Apple has invested only 1.5 trillion rupiah ($95 million) through developer academies, falling short of a promised 1.7 trillion rupiah commitment.

The ministry has yet to make a final decision on Apple's enhanced proposal. Recent attempts by Apple executives to meet with industry minister Agus Gumiwang Kartasasmita in Jakarta are said to have been unsuccessful, with the executives meeting a director-general instead.

Indonesia represents a significant market for Apple, with the country's population of 280 million operating some 354 million active mobile phones.

Note: Due to the political or social nature of the discussion regarding this topic, the discussion thread is located in our Political News forum. All forum members and site visitors are welcome to read and follow the thread, but posting is limited to forum members with at least 100 posts.

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Top Rated Comments

20 months ago
So it’s a bribe…
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
mikebenton Avatar
20 months ago
7 years ago it was the same with iPhone 6/7, but the threshold was 30% and Apple invested $44M. The Indonesian government is trying to make a deal that's best for its citizens. I guess I can't blame them. It's an investment that has potential to earn a return - it's not just a donation. Also, their government isn't making requirements around back-door access to user's data. It's the 4th most populous region on the planet...you have to pay to play. If it was a tariff, that would just be money going to the government. That's not what this is.
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
I7guy Avatar
20 months ago
Really sounds like a shakedown.
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Stiksi Avatar
20 months ago

Imagine if every country worked liked this. Prices on everything would skyrocket. This is nothing more than Indonesia shaking down Apple because they can.

And Apple doesn’t dodge taxes. Pay the legally allowed minimum, yes. Work and lobby to make its tax bill as low as possible, also yes. Dodge, no.
I think it's safe to call it tax dodging / evasion when the on-off largest company in the world has a smaller tax percentage than your average pensioner. Sure, it's not illegal according to the laws they lobbied (=paid) for but it's also not right. Many global issues could be solved quickly if every top company paid their fair share.
Score: 7 Votes (Like | Disagree)
20 months ago

Maybe once a few countries are on the chopping block the bully EU will start to calm down.
You really think all those countries want iPhones more than Apple wants cash? You think people will riot and overthrow the government over losing iPhones before investors riot and overthrow Tim Cook over losing billions in revenue?

Those countries have everything to win and pretty much nothing to lose. And it's not like the US itself is acting any differently (see e.g. banning Huawei, increasing tariffs), when it has the leverage.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
antiprotest Avatar
20 months ago
This is extortion, no doubt. But they can't even do it right. It's kind of weak getting this amount from Apple. They should send people to learn from the EU. Or perhaps this is just a first attempt and there will be many more to come once they learn how to make companies pay. Kind of like ransomware.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)