The Daily Star
 
 
'Made in China' is taking on a new,  more formidable shape
By Ang Yuen  Yuen 
Commentary by 
Monday, June 14, 2010  



“It’s a dying business,” said the owner of a  garment factory I met in 
Zhuhai, a city in Guangdong Province. Like many in his  line of business, he is 
packing up. Lured by abundant cheap labor, investors  flooded to Zhuhai two 
decades ago. Gone, it seems, is the heyday of T-shirts,  toys, plastic 
flowers, tiles, hooks, springs, and the like. Today, the costs of  
manufacturing 
such items are lower in countries like Bangladesh and Vietnam than  in 
Guangdong.

As labor costs continue to climb, is China  set to lose its coveted spot as 
the world’s workshop?

Rising labor costs are inevitable. China’s  government introduced tough 
labor laws and a minimum wage in 2008. Recent  policies to improve rural 
economic conditions have slowed the flow of migrants  from the countryside. 
Workers are demanding higher compensation to match the  fast-rising cost of 
living 
in China’s cities, as manifested in an ongoing and  high-profile labor 
strike at a Honda plant based in Guangdong. Salary was the  major point of 
contention. 

Workers on strike demanded a raise in pay  from the current 1,500 renminbi 
($234.00) to 2,000-2,500 renminbi ($373.13) per  month. Clearly, Chinese 
factories can no longer offer dirt-cheap prices.

Apparel production is a prime example of  China’s declining competiveness 
in markets dependent on low-cost labor.  According to a study by the US 
consulting firm Jassin O’Rourke, labor costs in  China are higher than in seven 
other Asian countries. The average cost for a  worker is $1.08 per hour in 
China’s coastal provinces and $0.55-0.80 in the  inland provinces. India was 
in seventh place, at $0.51 per hour. Bangladesh  offers the lowest cost, only 
one-fifth the price of locations like Shanghai and  Suzhou. 

Adding to China’s labor woes, the financial  crisis during the last two 
years had a disastrous effect on foreign demand. In  2009, China’s export value 
fell by 16 percent from 2008. Labor intensive  industries were especially 
hard hit. In the textiles industry, profits declined  for the first time in 
10 years in 2008. In March 2009, exports of electronics  and IT products 
tumbled nearly 25 percent from the previous period. Although  Chinese exports 
have begun to recover in 2010, the impact of the financial  crisis remains 
palpable. By January 2010, the value of exports has returned to  its previous 
level in the same period of 2008. But many factories have already  perished. 

For Chinese manufacturers, a long-term trend  of rising costs coupled with 
a short-term export slump were unprecedented  challenges. But the government 
and entrepreneurs are not idly sitting by as  competitiveness slips. These 
adverse conditions have inadvertently propelled a  long-delayed 
restructuring of China’s labor-intensive industries. As costs  surge, Chinese 
producers 
are seeking higher value, new niches, and more  influence over policymaking.

Along China’s dynamic coastal belt, local  governments are drafting new 
economic blueprints to push their firms up the  value-added chain. Consider the 
case of a textiles manufacturing center in  Jiangsu province, dubbed the “
silk capital” of China. Three-quarters of the  city’s GDP had been coming 
from textiles production. Last year, however, exports  fell by about 15 
percent. For local planners, the export shock was a wake-up  call for change.


As a result, officials in Jiangsu are no  longer content with sewing 
clothing. Leveraging a mixture of administrative  guidance and monetary 
incentives, the city government plans to reduce the share  of garments in the 
output 
of textiles products by 25 percent in three years and  to increase the 
industrial applications of chemical fibers, which promise much  higher returns 
than apparel production. Already, according to local officials,  the city’s 
factories have acquired the ability to mass-produce super-thin fibers  first 
designed in Japan.

In fact, the global meltdown may turn out to  be a blessing in disguise for 
industrial upgrading. Slumping orders devastated  low-end producers, which 
barely survived on wafer-thin margins. Half of China’s  toy factories went 
bust by the end of 2008. Though alarming in the short term,  the eradication 
of small producers spells good news for those that survived the  crisis. As 
firms consolidate market share, they gain economies of scale. Larger  firms 
are more capable of pooling resources for research and development, which  
is the key to China’s aspirations to climb the value ladder.

Less fragmented industries also lobby better.  Traditionally, contract 
manufacturers in China are scattered and fiercely  competitive. They have 
little 
if any say over domestic and international  regulations. Producers in 
Jiangsu, for example, were forced to adapt constantly  to fickle product-safety 
and environmental standards in export markets. Compared  to producers in the 
United States and Europe, those in China are weakly  organized and passive.

This could change. As surviving firms gain in  size, Chinese businesses may 
exercise more bargaining power vis-à-vis the  Chinese government and 
foreign firms. Exercising a louder voice in politics at  home and abroad could 
mean reduced uncertainty for Chinese exporters. Consider  the strategy of 
Lenovo, China’s largest computer manufacturer; it has hired a  lobbyist in 
Washington DC, reportedly the first Chinese company to do so. 

In decades to come, China can no longer  sustain the cost advantages that 
defined its initial period of export success.  But it is a mistake to think 
that China’s manufacturing will remain in the  doldrums. Compared to many 
developing countries, China’s government is stable  and embraces foreign 
investment. Industrial clusters have been established in  many parts of the 
country, where business connections can compensate for rising  costs. Domestic 
consumption is growing. Further, as low-end, low-cost labor jobs  morph toward 
higher-end, higher-cost jobs, China will move not only into more  valuable 
manufactured goods, but also into the service industries, such as  design. 
This change, too, could give the US a difficult new  run-for-its-money.

When China’s labor-intensive industries  emerge from their metamorphosis, 
we should expect to see firms that are larger,  that invest more in product 
innovation and design, and that hold more sway over  business and trade 
policies. So “Made in China” is not losing international  dominance yet. It is 
merely taking on a new – and possibly more formidable –  shape.



Ang Yuen Yuen is a professor of international  affairs at Columbia 
University. 


_______________________________________________
Centroids mailing list: Centroids@radicalcentrism.com
http://radicalcentrism.com/mailman/listinfo/centroids_radicalcentrism.com
Archives at http://radicalcentrism.org/pipermail/centroids_radicalcentrism.com/

Reply via email to