(Business Week)

DECEMBER 6, 2004 

SPECIAL REPORT -- THE CHINA PRICE 

"The China Price"  
They are the three scariest words in U.S. industry.
Cut your price at least 30% or lose your customers.
Nearly every manufacturer is vulnerable -- from
furniture to networking gear. The result: A massive
shift in economic power is under way 

 
>From the rich walnut paneling and carved arches to the
molded Italian Renaissance patterns on the ceiling,
the circa 1925 council chamber room of Akron's
municipal hall evokes a time when the America's
manufacturing heartland was at the peak of its power.
But when the U.S.-China Economic & Security Review
Commission, a congressionally appointed panel,
convened there on Sept. 23, it was not to discuss
power but decline. One after another, economists,
union officials, and small manufacturers took the
microphone to describe the devastation Chinese
competitors are inflicting on U.S. industries, from
kitchenware and car tires to electronic circuit
boards.

These aren't stories of mundane sunset industries
equipped with antiquated technology. David W. Johnson,
CEO of 92-year-old Summitville Tiles Inc. in
Summitville, Ohio, described how imports forced him to
shut a state-of-the-art, $120 million tilemaking plant
four football fields long, sending Summitville into
Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Now, a tenfold surge
in high-quality Chinese imports at "below our
manufacturing costs" threatens to polish Summitville
off. Makers of precision machine tools and plastic
molds -- essential supports of America's industrial
architecture -- told how their business has shrunk as
home-appliance makers have shifted manufacturing from
Ohio to China. Despite buying the best
computer-controlled gear, Douglas S. Bartlett reported
that at his Cary (Ill.)-based Bartlett Manufacturing
Co., a maker of high-end circuit boards for aerospace
and automotive customers, sales are half the
late-1990s level and the workforce is one-third
smaller. He waved a board Bartlett makes for a U.S.
Navy submarine-detection device. His buyer says he can
get the same board overseas for 40% less. "From
experience I can only assume this is the Chinese
price," Bartlett said. "We have faced competition in
the past. What is dramatically different about China
is that they are about half the price."





SLIDE SHOW: CHINA PRICESWhere the Jobs Went
"The China price." They are the three scariest words
in U.S. industry. In general, it means 30% to 50% less
than what you can possibly make something for in the
U.S. In the worst cases, it means below your cost of
materials. Makers of apparel, footware, electric
appliances, and plastics products, which have been
shutting U.S. factories for decades, know well the
futility of trying to match the China price. It has
been a big factor in the loss of 2.7 million
manufacturing jobs since 2000. Meanwhile, America's
deficit with China keeps soaring to new records. It is
likely to pass $150 billion this year.

Now, manufacturers and workers who never thought they
had to worry about the China price are confronting the
new math of the mainland. These companies had once
held their own against imports mostly because their
businesses required advanced skills, heavy investment,
and proximity to customers. Many of these companies
are in the small-to-midsize sector, which makes up 37%
of U.S. manufacturing. The China price is even being
felt in high tech. Chinese exports of advanced
networking gear, still at a low level, are already
affecting prices. And there's talk by some that China
could eventually become a major car exporter.

Multinationals have accelerated the mainland's
industrialization by shifting production there, and
midsize companies that can are following suit. The
alternative is to stay at home and fight -- and
probably lose. Ohio State University business
professor Oded Shenkar, author of the new book The
Chinese Century, hears many war stories from local
companies. He gives it to them straight: "If you still
make anything labor intensive, get out now rather than
bleed to death. Shaving 5% here and there won't work."
Chinese producers can make the same adjustments. "You
need an entirely new business model to compete."

America has survived import waves before, from Japan,
South Korea, and Mexico. And it has lived with China
for two decades. But something very different is
happening. The assumption has long been that the U.S.
and other industrialized nations will keep leading in
knowledge-intensive industries while developing
nations focus on lower-skill sectors. That's now open
to debate. "What is stunning about China is that for
the first time we have a huge, poor country that can
compete both with very low wages and in high tech,"
says Harvard University economist Richard B. Freeman.
"Combine the two, and America has a problem."

How much of a problem? That's in fierce dispute. On
one side, the benefits of the relationship with China
are enormous. After years of struggling to crack the
mainland market, U.S. multinationals from General
Motors (GM ) to Procter & Gamble (PG ) and Motorola
(MOT ) are finally reaping rich profits. They're
making cell phones, shampoo, autos, and PCs in China
and selling them to its middle class of some 100
million people, a group that should more than double
in size by 2010. "Our commercial success in China is
important to our competitiveness worldwide," says
Motorola China Chairman Gene Delaney.

By outsourcing components and hardware from China,
U.S. companies have sharply boosted their return on
capital. China's trade barriers continue to come down,
part of its agreement to enter the World Trade
Organization in 2001. Big new opportunities will
emerge for U.S. insurers, banks, and retailers.
China's surging demand for raw materials and
commodities has driven prices up worldwide, creating a
windfall for U.S. steelmakers, miners, and lumber
companies. The cheap cost of Chinese goods has kept
inflation low in the U.S. and fueled a consumer boom
that helped America weather a recession and kept
global growth on track.

But there's a huge cost to the China relationship,
too. Foremost is the question of America's huge trade
deficit, of which China is the largest and
fastest-growing part. While U.S. consumers binge on
Chinese-made goods, the U.S. balance-of-payments
deficit is nearing a record 6% of gross domestic
product. The trade shortfall -- coupled with the U.S.
budget deficit -- is driving the dollar ever downward,
raising fears that cracks will appear in the global
financial system. And by keeping its currency pegged
to the greenback at a level analysts see as
undervalued, China amplifies the problem.

America's Eroding Base
The deficit with China will keep widening under most
projections. That raises the issue: Will America's
industrial base erode to a dangerous level? So far the
hardest-hit industries have been those that were
destined to migrate to low-cost nations anyway. But
China is ramping up rapidly in more advanced
industries where America remains competitive, adding
state-of-the-art capacity in cars, specialty steel,
petrochemicals, and microchips. These plants are aimed
at meeting insatiable demand in China. But the danger
is that if China's growth stalls, the resulting glut
will turn into another export wave and disrupt whole
new strata of American industry. "As producers in
China end up with significant unused capacity, they
will try to be much more creative in how they deploy
it," says Jim Hemerling, a senior vice-president at
Boston Consulting Group's Shanghai office.

That's why China is an even thornier trade issue for
the U.S. than Japan was in the 1980s. It's clear some
Chinese exporters cheat, from intellectual-property
theft and dumping to securing unfair subsidies.
Washington can get much more aggressive in fighting
violations of trade law. But broader protectionism is
a nonstarter. On a practical level the U.S. is now so
dependent on Chinese suppliers that resurrecting trade
barriers would just raise costs and diminish the real
benefits that China trade confers. Also, unlike Japan
20 years ago, China is a much more open economy. It
continues to lower tariffs and even runs a slight
trade deficit with the whole world -- which makes the
U.S.'s deficit with China all the more glaring. Hiking
the value of the yuan 30% might help. But that's
unlikely. For one thing, Beijing fears what such a
shift would do to jobs -- and the value of its $515
billion in foreign reserves. The real solution is for
the U.S. to reduce its twin deficits on its own -- but
that's more America's issue than China's.

Meanwhile, U.S. companies are no longer investing in
much new capacity at home, and the ranks of U.S.
engineers are thinning. In contrast, China is emerging
as the most competitive manufacturing platform ever.
Chief among its formidable assets is its cheap labor,
from $120-a-month production workers to $2,000-a-month
chip designers. Even in sophisticated electronics
industries, where direct labor is less than 10% of
costs, China's low wages are reflected in the entire
supply chain -- components, office workers, cargo
handling -- you name it.

China is also propelled by an enormous domestic market
that brings economies of scale, feverish local rivalry
that keeps prices low, an army of engineers that is
growing by 350,000 annually, young workers and
managers willing to put in 12-hour days and work
weekends, an unparalleled component and material base
in electronics and light industry, and an
entrepreneurial zeal to do whatever it takes to please
big retailers such as Wal-Mart Stores (WMT ), Target
(TGT ), Best Buy (BBY ), and J.C. Penney (JCP ). "The
reason practically all home furnishings are now made
in China factories is that they simply are better
suppliers," says Janet E. Fox, vice-president for
international procurement at J.C. Penny Co. "American
manufacturers aren't even in the same game."

Fox's point is important. China's competitive
advantages are built on much more than unfair trade
practices. Some 70% of exports now come from private
companies and foreign ventures mainly owned by
Taiwanese, Hong Kong, Japanese, and U.S. companies
that have brought access to foreign markets, advanced
technology, and managerial knowhow. Aside from cheap
land and tax breaks in some areas, private Chinese
manufacturers get minimal government help. "The
Chinese government cannot afford to offer financial
support to the export economy," says business
professor Gu Kejian of People's University in Beijing.
And as capital floods in and modern plants are built
in China, efficiencies improve dramatically. The
productivity of private industry in China has grown an
astounding 17% annually for five years, according to
the U.S. Conference Board.

China needs U.S. imports, though not as much as
imagined when Beijing agreed to join the WTO. U.S.
exports to China have risen 25% to 35% annually in the
past two years. But China's exports still outstrip its
imports from the U.S. by 5 to 1. The U.S. sells about
$2.4 billion worth of aircraft a year, and its
semiconductor exports tripled in three years.
Otherwise the U.S. looks like a developing nation. It
runs surpluses in commodities such as oil seeds,
grains, iron, wood pulp, and raw animal hides.

Meanwhile, the Chinese keep expanding their export
base. Chinese competition arrives so fast that it's
nearly impossible to adjust through the usual
strategies, such as automating or squeezing suppliers.
The Japanese, South Koreans, and Europeans often took
"four or five years to develop their place in the
market," says Robert B. Cassidy, a former U.S. Trade
Representative official who helped negotiate China's
entry into the WTO and now works for Washington law
firm Collier Shannon Scott, which wages dumping cases
on behalf of U.S. clients. "China overwhelms a market
so quickly you don't see it coming."

"Shock and Awe"
Georgetown Steel Co. is a case in point. The
Georgetown (S.C.) maker of wire rods used in
everything from bridge cables to ball bearings had
battled Asian and Mexican imports for years. But last
year it shut its 600-worker plant, citing a tenfold
leap in Chinese imports, to 252,000 tons, from 2001 to
2003. International Steel Group Inc. (ISG ) has since
bought the facility after U.S. anti-dumping duties on
imports and a rise in global demand helped hike
domestic prices. The Gardiner (Mass.) plant of Seaman
Paper Co., a maker of crepe and decorative paper, is
highly automated. Yet Chinese imports have grabbed a
third of the market. It sells 81-foot streamers to big
retailers for as little as 9 cents each. That's below
Seaman's cost of materials. "We thought we could
offset Chinese labor cost by automating, but we just
couldn't," says Seaman President George Jones III.

In bedroom furniture, 59 U.S. plants employing 15,500
workers have closed since January, 2001, as Chinese
imports have rocketed 221%, to $1.4 billion -- half of
the U.S. market. Prices have plunged 30%. Dumping
certainly seems to be one factor: At its Galax (Va.)
factory, Vaughan-Bassett Furniture Co. displays a
Chinese knockoff of one of its dressers that
wholesales for $105 -- below the world market cost for
the wood. But the main competition comes from Chinese
megaplants that sell directly to U.S. retailers and
can get a new design into mass production in two
months. The new Chinese factories of suppliers such as
Lacquer Craft Furniture, Markor, and Shing Mark, some
of them Taiwanese-owned, employ thousands and are so
big they seem meant to build Boeing 747s, making most
U.S. factories look like cottage industries. "The
first wave is shock and awe," says John D. Bassett
III, CEO of Vaughan-Bassett, whose sales and workforce
have shrunk even though it has boosted productivity
fivefold at its 600-worker Galax plant since 1995 by
investing in computer-controlled wood drying, cutting,
and carving gear. "American industry has never
encountered [such] competition."

As component industries and design work follow
assembly lines to China, key elements of the U.S.
industrial base are beginning to erode. American
plastic-molding and machine-tool industries have
shrunk dramatically in the past five years. Take Incoe
Corp. in Troy, Mich., a maker of steel components for
plastic-injection machines. "When the economy turned
soft, we anticipated the business would come back,"
says Incoe CFO Robert Hoff. "But it didn't. We saw our
customer base either close or migrate to China." The
U.S. printed-circuit-board industry has seen sales go
from $11 billion to under $5 billion since 2001. In
that time, PCB exports from China have more than
doubled, to a projected $3.4 billion this year, says
market researcher Global Sources Ltd. (GSOL ) Most
U.S. production of key electronics materials, such as
copper-clad laminates, has fled, too. "The whole
industry is hollowing out," says Joseph C. Fehsenfeld,
CEO of Midwest Printed Circuit Services Inc. in Round
Lake Beach, Ill.

The migration of electronics to China began when the
Taiwanese shifted plants and suppliers across the
Taiwan Strait in the late 1990s. As recently as four
years ago, though, the U.S. exported $45 billion in
computer hardware. Since the tech crash, that number
has slid to $28 billion as the industry headed en
masse for China, which is even more competitive than
Taiwan. "All electronics hardware manufacturing is
going to China," says Michael E. Marks, CEO of
Flextronics Corp (FLEX )., a contract manufacturer
that employs 41,000 in China. Flextronics and other
companies are hiring Chinese engineers to design the
products assembled there. "There is a myth that the
U.S. would remain the knowledge economy and China the
sweatshop," says BCG's Hemerling. "Increasingly, this
is no longer the case."

A visit to Flextronics' campus in the Pearl River
Delta town of Doumen vividly illustrates Marks's
point. The site employs 18,000 workers making cell
phones, X-box game consoles, PCs, and other hardware
in 13 factories sprawled over 149 acres. The bamboo
scaffolding is about to come down on an additional
720,000-square-foot factory nearing completion. Almost
every chemical, component, plastic, machine tool, and
packing material Flextronics needs is available from
thousands of suppliers within a two-hour drive of the
site. That alone makes most components 20% cheaper in
China than in the U.S., says campus General Manager
Tim Dinwiddie. Plus, China will soon eliminate
remaining tariffs on imported chips. In the past five
years, electronic manufacturing-services companies
such as Flextronics have cut their U.S. production
from $37 billion to $27 billion while doubling their
China output, to $31 billion. That's likely to double
again by 2007.

"Gravitational Pull"
China is even making its presence felt in the U.S.
market for networking gear, a bastion of American
comparative advantage. On Nov. 15, struggling 3Com
Corp. (COMS ) in Marlborough, Mass., launched a
data-communications switching system for corporate
networks of 10,000 users or more. It claims twice the
performance of Cisco Systems Inc.'s (CSCO ) comparable
switch. At $183,000, 3Com's list price is 25% less.
Its secret? 3Com is settling for lower margins and
taking advantage of a 1,200-engineer joint venture
with China telecom giant Huawei Technologies Co. This
is the first high-end piece of networking gear sold by
a U.S. company that is designed and manufactured in
China. For the price of one U.S. engineer, the joint
venture can throw four engineers into the task of
making customized products for a client. Even if 3Com
does not succeed, similar tie-ups are expected, which
could drive down prices of high-end gear sold in the
U.S. Says 3Com President Bruce Claflin: "We want to
change the pricing structure of this industry." 3Com
hopes this is the start of a whole line of networking
gear designed and made in China for the global market.
Without referring to China, Cisco CEO John T. Chambers
says "we are starting to see a stream of good, very
price-competitive competitors, particular from Asia."

The next step for China is critical mass in core
industries. Outside Beijing, Semiconductor
Manufacturing International Corp. (SMI ) has just
opened a chip plant fabricating 12-inch silicon wafers
that experts say is just two generations behind Intel
Corp. (INTC ) A foundry that makes chips on a contract
basis, this plant won't compete directly with U.S.
chipmakers. But with four more 12-inch wafer plants
due by 2006 and many more fabs in the pipeline, the
U.S. Semiconductor Industry Assn. warns that a
"gravitational pull" could suck capital, people, and
leading-edge research-and-development and design
functions from the U.S.

Digital technologies aren't the only areas where the
Chinese have huge ambitions. In the past decade, U.S.
petrochemical makers have invested in little new
capacity. But at a three-mile-long site in Nanjing,
12,000 workers are erecting a $2.7 billion network of
pipes and towers for China's Sinopec (SNP ) and
Germany's BASF (BF ) that by next year will be among
the world's biggest, most modern complexes for
ethylene, the basic ingredient in plastics. An even
bigger complex is going up in Shanghai. "The Chinese
understand everything that scale means," says Fluor
Corp. (FLR ) Group President Robert McNamara, who
lives part-time in Shanghai and whose company has
design contracts at both complexes. "When they target
an industry to dominate, they don't mitigate."

Can China dominate everything? Of course not. America
remains the world's biggest manufacturer, producing
75% of what it consumes, though that's down from 90%
in the mid-'90s. Industries requiring huge R&D budgets
and capital investment, such as aerospace,
pharmaceuticals, and cars, still have strong bases in
the U.S. "I don't see China becoming a major car
exporter in the foreseeable future," says GM China (GM
) Chairman Philip F. Murtaugh. "There is no economic
rationale." Murtaugh cites high production costs and
quality issues at Chinese car plants, as well as
just-in-time delivery needs in the West, as
impediments.

Burning Rubber
Don't tell that to Miao Wei, president of Dongfeng
Motor Corp. On Nov. 7, Dongfeng and Honda Motor Co.
(HMC ) announced that their joint venture will invest
$340 million to boost output of Honda CR-Vs and Civics
fivefold, to 120,000, by early 2006. The plant aims to
achieve world standards by employing Honda's flexible
manufacturing system. "Honda will sell some of the
Chinese-built cars in Europe," says Miao. Nissan Motor
Co. (NSANY ) is also talking about exporting with
Dongfeng.

China's carmakers are developing the suppliers that
one day could sustain exports. Auto-parts maker
Wanxiang Group in Hangzhou started as a tiny
township-owned farm-machinery shop in 1969. Now it's a
$2.4 billion conglomerate that supplies the Chinese
assembly plants of GM, Ford Motor (F ), Volkswagen,
and others and also exports 30% of its output. In two
years, China will drop the rule that its auto plants
buy at least 40% of parts locally. Wanxiang is getting
ready: It is opening a $42 million plant loaded with
U.S. and European testing gear. And since 1995,
Wanxiang has bought 10 U.S. auto-parts makers. "Our
goal is to acquire technology, management, and most
important, to get access to overseas markets," says
Chairman Lu Guanqiu.

Some U.S manufacturers hope China will run out of
steam. This year, factories in Guangdong and Fujian
faced serious labor shortages for the first time.
Red-hot demand has meant skyrocketing costs for
China's producers, most of which rely on imported
goods such as steel, plastics, and components. Energy
shortages have forced manufacturers to shut factories
several times a week. In almost any industry one can
think of, vicious price wars are biting into already
razor-sharp margins. "There are so many small
companies competing that they crowd out all profit,"
says Beijing University economist Zhang Weiying.
Indeed, given the low emphasis on profits and the
unsophisticated accounting of many Chinese companies,
often their pricing isn't based on a full
understanding of costs. Having gotten as far as they
can on cheap production costs, Chinese manufacturers
must develop their own technologies and innovative
products to move ahead -- areas in which they've made
slow progress so far.

The juggernaut will slow, but only slightly. While
salaries for top Chinese designers are rising fast,
they are still a fifth to a tenth of those in Silicon
Valley. If China's wages rise 8% annually for the next
five years, says a Boston Consulting Group study, the
average factory hand will still earn just $1.30 an
hour by then. If China allowed the yuan to appreciate
by around 10% in the next year, productivity gains
would more than offset the higher costs, figures China
expert Nicholas R. Lardy of the Institute for
International Economics. "I don't think revaluation
will have a significant impact," he says.

And Chinese producers are hardly standing still. In a
recent survey of Chinese and U.S. manufacturers by
IndustryWeek and Cleveland-based Manufacturing
Performance Institute, 54% of Chinese companies cited
innovation as one of their top objectives, while only
26% of U.S. respondents did. Chinese companies spend
more on worker training and enterprise-management
software. And 91% of U.S. plants are more than a
decade old, vs. 54% in China. Shanghai-based TV maker
SVA Group, for example, has opened China's first plant
to make flat panels, a venture with Japan's NEC (NIPNY
) Corp. That is enabling SVA to secure a U.S.
beachhead by selling liquid-crystal display and plasma
TV sets through channels such as the online sites of
Costco Wholesale (COST ) and Target. Starting price:
$1,600 -- 30% below similar models by Royal Philips
Electronics (PHG ) and Panasonic (MC ).

More innovation. Better goods. Lower prices. Newer
plants. America will surely continue to benefit from
China's expansion. But unless it can deal with the
industrial challenge, it will suffer a loss of
economic power and influence. Can America afford the
China price? It's the question U.S. workers, execs,
and policymakers urgently need to ask.


By Pete Engardio and Dexter RobertsWith Brian Bremner
in Beijing and bureau reports




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