Business | Schumpeter

What if carmaking went the way of consumer electronics?

The Foxconnification of electric vehicles

A conveyor belt with a Ford T, a modern car and an EV car. Above them is a robot hand holding a smartphone. This talks about the evolution of cars and production.
Illustration: Brett Ryder

CARS AREN’T what they used to be. This is not a petrolhead’s lament. It is a statement of technological fact. These days even automobiles powered by a growling V8 engine contain a few kilometres of electrical wires, up from a few hundred metres in the 1990s, plus a thousand semiconductor chips and millions of lines of computer code to control everything from locks and antilock brakes to infotainment. And that is before you get to the electric vehicles (EVs) that are set to one day hog the world’s roads, a recent slowdown in sales notwithstanding, let alone to Elon Musk’s self-driving Cybercabs. The battery and other electronics make up more than half the value of components in an EV, compared with a tenth in that V8. Now, 17 years after Apple gave the world the iPhone and 13 since Toyota somewhat prematurely coined the phrase “smartphone on wheels”, modern cars have a lot in common with consumer gadgets.

Explore more

This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Foxconnification”

From the October 19th 2024 edition

Discover stories from this section and more in the list of contents

Explore the edition

Discover more

Elon Musk looks on during a conference.

Elon Musk’s xAI goes after OpenAI

The fight is turning nasty

A man waitiing for the lift, which is full of people.

How to behave in lifts: an office guide

Life in an elevator



Gautam Adani faces bribery charges in America

Prosecutors allege one of India’s richest men paid off local officials

Nvidia’s boss dismisses fears that AI has hit a wall

But it’s “urgent” to get to the next level, Jensen Huang tells The Economist

Does Dallas offer a vision of America’s future?

The Texan city embodies the allure of small government