Indeed, the example of the iPhone, now the world's most successful consumer product, graphically shows how China's manufacturing capability saved what is now a triumph from a potential PR disaster. As the New York Times noted:
"A little over a month before the iPhone was scheduled to appear in stores, Mr. Jobs beckoned a handful of lieutenants into an office. For weeks, he had been carrying a prototype of the device in his pocket. Mr. Jobs angrily held up his iPhone, angling it so everyone could see the dozens of tiny scratches marring its plastic screen… People will carry this phone in their pocket, he said. … 'I won't sell a product that gets scratched,' he said tensely. The only solution was using unscratchable glass instead. 'I want a glass screen, and I want it perfect in six weeks.' After one executive left that meeting, he booked a flight to Shenzhen, China. If Mr. Jobs wanted perfect, there was nowhere else to go."
The result was that when the screens arrived: "the workers were assembling 10,000 iPhones a day within 96 hours. Another example: Apple had originally estimated that it would take nine months to hire the 8,700 qualified industrial engineers needed to oversee production of the iPhone; in China, it took 15 days."
Low wages are therefore no longer China's key attraction for foreign investors.
"Wages actually aren't that big a part of the cost of making consumer electronics… Paying American wages to build iPhones would add only about US$65 to the retail price of each handset, according to analysts' estimates. That's an amount Apple could likely afford. And in fact, China no longer offers rock-bottom wages. But when it did, it used that window 'to innovate the entire way supply chains work,' says Sarah Lacy at Pando Daily. China is now 'a place other countries can beat on sheer cost, but not on speed, flexibility, and know-how.'"
The second fundamental feature of the new situation for inward FDI is that since 2007, China has not only been an export base, but it has also been the world's most rapidly growing market in dollar terms as well as in percentage terms. This will only continue. This is a result of the fact that although the U.S. remains the world's largest economy, at market exchange rates, China's growth rate is almost three times that of the U.S. Consequently, as shown in the chart, in 2013 China's increase in GDP was US$1,038 billion compared to US$555 billion for the U.S., i.e. China's dollar GDP increased by almost twice as much as it did in the United States.