The iPhone maker had announced at the start of the year it would
invest $30 billion in the United States, taking advantage of a
tax windfall stemming from U.S. President Donald Trump's
sweeping tax reforms.
The 133-acre campus in Austin will employ workers across various
functions including engineering, R&D, operations and finance.
The city is already home to the second largest number of Apple
employees outside its headquarters in Cupertino, California.
Apple will also set up sites in Seattle, San Diego and Culver
City, California and hire over 1,000 employees each in these
locations, while also expanding operations in Pittsburgh, New
York and Boulder, Colorado over the next three years.
Many American multinationals have been facing political pressure
to ramp up investments at home as part of Trump's "America
First" policies, which have left the United States embroiled in
a bitter trade war with China. The president has also warned of
tariffs on iPhones and other Apple products imported from China.
Apple's technology rival Amazon.com Inc <AMZN.O> last month
ended a months-long search for its second headquarters, picking
New York City and an area just outside Washington, D.C. for
massive new offices, with plans to create thousands of jobs.
The new Austin campus will be located less than a mile away from
Apple's existing facilities, and will first house 5,000 new
employees with the capacity to expand to 15,000.
The company, which last year moved into its sleek "spaceship"
campus in Cupertino, said jobs at the new Austin center would
include engineering, research and development, finance and sales
functions.
(Reporting by Subrat Patnaik and additional reporting Shubham
Kalia and Aishwarya Venugopal in Bengaluru; Editing by Sai
Sachin Ravikumar and Saumyadeb Chakrabarty)
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