Foxconn chair predicts AI will end manufacturers' search for cheap labor
- Reference: 1747720928
- News link: https://www.theregister.co.uk/2025/05/20/foxconn_chair_ai_manufacturing_predictions/
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Liu on Tuesday delivered a keynote address at the Computex conference in Taiwan and advanced a theory that rich nations do two things to keep the cost of manufactured goods low: Allow immigration to bring in more people willing to work for low wages and outsource to low-GDP countries where costs are lower.
The contract manufacturing giant’s chair sees limits to those trends, as “eventually you will run out of low-GDP countries” and immigration becomes a political issue.
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“Generative AI and robotics will fill the void,” he said. “That is the opportunity I see when a country becomes more prosperous – the low-GDP work will be done by GenAI and robotics.”
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“I think that is the real challenge for all developed countries,” Liu added. “I urge leaders of developed countries to watch this very carefully.”
If those leaders are listening, he’ll tell them that Foxconn is proof of AI-induced change as after applying generative AI to its own operations it’s found that software working alone can do 80 percent of the work required to set up equipment for a new production run – and do it faster than people. AI struggles to finish the job unless it has human assistance, but the combination of bots and brains is faster at finishing the job than wetware working alone.
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Liu also said generative AI is helping Foxconn to resolve production issues more quickly.
“We thought maybe we could replace every human,” Liu admitted. “We quickly realized we could not.” But Foxconn has saved enough time that its human experts can now focus on gnarly problems, an outcome the Chairman likes as he finds it hard to hire skilled and experienced staff and would rather they work on high-value tasks.
“FoxBrain”
Foxconn is therefore investing in more AI to power its factories. Liu revealed the company is creating its own manufacturing-centric model called “FoxBrain” that will blend Meta’s Llama 3 and 4 models and data drawn from its own operations to create what he described as “Agentic workflow for very domain specific applications.”
The manufacturing giant, formally named Hon Hai Technology Group, intends to open source that model. It also intends to deploy a model to all of its factories and have them contribute data about its performance so that Foxconn headquarters can constantly refine the company AI.
[5]Non-x86 servers boom even faster than the rest of the AI-infused and GPU-hungry market
[6]Nvidia joins made-in-America party, hopes to flog $500B in homegrown AI supers by 2029
[7]Fear of Foxconn reportedly driving possible Nissan, Honda and Mitsubishi merger
[8]Lenovo turns to India as source of AI servers
Liu also revealed that Foxconn uses AI to design factories by employing Nvidia’s Omniverse tool to create a digital twin – even before it has a physical factory to simulate. An AI then virtually operates the digital twin, producing optimization suggestions that are later modelled in the digital twin. Once Foxconn feels this process has produced an optimized design it starts to build in the real world.
Foxconn can already use robots to build robots, a feat that Liu seemed to find wondrous.
EV platform revving up
Liu also mentioned Foxconn’s plans to enter the automotive market with a reference design for an electric vehicle.
He told the Computex crowd that Foxconn uses this approach when working with PC vendors, who take its designs and tweak them to create custom products.
“A good reference design saves a lot of time and improves time to market and cost for our customers,” he said, citing an 80 percent reduction in the work required to create new models. “Please stay tuned for this new EV announcement,” he said. ®
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The answer my friends ...
I fear that Kurt Vonnegut may have answered that question three quarters of a century ago in his first novel "Player Piano." If that's the answer, humanity's immediate future may be less than glorious.
Easy. Lack of jobs will drive economic decline and wage collapse, until hiring humans becomes cheaper than maintaining robots. The eventual equilibrium point of this process might be higher than the point at which low-skilled worker conditions and extreme inequality drive a series of bloody revolutions, but I wouldn't bet on it. Although you could, within limits, keep a lid on it through brutal repression.
Eventually, we'll just accept that we have to rework the economic system so that working becomes optional, although the rivers of blood might need to flow for a while before we get it.
I think this was one of the thoughts behind Orwell's 1984, obviously without AI etc.
That there were so few real jobs available but population kept increasing and productivity was so high that the only thing to do was to have perpetual war to consume resources and ensure employment. The Party was the means to keep control of and subjugate the population.
I can see it now...
Last-remaining-human: "Foxy, make me a smartphone and a lawnmower".
Foxy: "Sure, give me a moment..."
Last-remaining-human: "WTF? I didn't mean as a single item".
Re: I can see it now...
Actually, I expect lawnmowers will all be AI- and IoT-enabled well before that point is reached.
Re: I can see it now...
There is one cutting my neighbour's very large field as I type. I think the machine is probably larger than my yard...
Question: what will become of the workers? Most won't be able to adapt to get a higher qualified job, supposing such a job still exists.