The assembling of iPhone 7 began last month. Wistron, which announced last year plans to invest Rs 3,000 crore in the Narasupra industrial sector in Karnataka’s Kolar district, started Apple operations with assembling low-end iPhone SE and later iPhone 6S. According to Wistron India head Gururaj A, the company would set up an iPhone making unit in the 43 acres of land allotted to it, with an employment potential of over 10,000 people. The new Wistron facility is also set to manufacture a wider range of Apple’s devices. Apple is slowly but steadily strategising its plans to make deeper inroads in a country where over 450 million people use smartphones, and assembling iPhone 7 is another step towards gaining more ground. According to Tarun Pathak, Associate Director at Hong Kong-based Counterpoint Research, the Indian electronics market is growing fast and has gained a significant advantage on some of the competing countries. “I think to start with, it makes sense for Apple to localise assembling of models that have the potential to scale up and then slowly expands it to the entire portfolio,” Pathak told IANS. The Apple iPhone 7 runs iOS 12, is water-resistant and houses a 12MP camera, Retina HD display, great battery life and stereo speakers. The 32GB iPhone 7 costs Rs 39,900 while the 128GB variant Rs 49,900. In India, the price is a key factor when it comes to buying a smartphone. Apple has already begun reducing the price of the iPhone in China and may follow the same in India where iPhone is considered expensive. According to a report in Caixin on Monday, Apple has cut prices for several of its products including iPhones. For the first time this year, Apple has dropped iPhone prices on its official Chinese website. “The slash comes in response to China’s reduction of the tax burden for manufacturing and other sectors that began on April 1,” the report said. The iPhone maker is also seeking tax relief and other incentives to begin assembling more handsets and open its branded stores in India.