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End Of The Cheap 'Made-In-China' Era Sends Companies Scrambling For Options

ELAINE KURTENBACH   07/ 8/10 11:09 PM ET   AP

China Foxconn Deaths

SHANGHAI — Factory workers demanding better wages and working conditions are hastening the eventual end of an era of cheap costs that helped make southern coastal China the world's factory floor.

A series of strikes over the past two months have been a rude wakeup call for the many foreign companies that depend on China's low costs to compete overseas, from makers of Christmas trees to manufacturers of gadgets like the iPad.

Where once low-tech factories and scant wages were welcomed in a China eager to escape isolation and poverty, workers are now demanding a bigger share of the profits. The government, meanwhile, is pushing foreign companies to make investments in areas it believes will create greater wealth for China, like high technology.

Many companies are striving to stay profitable by shifting factories to cheaper areas farther inland or to other developing countries, and a few are even resuming production in the West.

"China is going to go through a very dramatic period. The big companies are starting to exit. We all see the writing on the wall," said Rick Goodwin, a China trade veteran of 22 years, whose company links foreign buyers with Chinese suppliers.

"I have 15 major clients. My job is to give the best advice I can give. I tell it like it is. I tell them, put your helmet on, it's going to get ugly," said Goodwin, who says dissatisfied workers and hard-to-predict exchange rates are his top worries.

Beijing's decision to stop tethering the Chinese currency to the U.S. dollar, allowing it to appreciate and thus boosting costs in yuan, has multiplied the uncertainty for companies already struggling with meager profit margins.

In an about-face mocked on "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart," Wham-O, the company that created the Hula-Hoop and Slip 'n Slide, decided to bring half of its Frisbee production and some production of its other products back to the U.S.

At the other end of the scale, some in research-intensive sectors such as pharmaceutical, biotech and other life sciences companies are also reconsidering China for a range of reasons, including costs and incentives being offered in other countries.

"Life sciences companies have shifted some production back to the U.S. from China. In some cases, the U.S. was becoming cheaper," said Sean Correll, director of consulting services for Burlington, Mass.-based Emptoris.

That may soon become true for publishers, too. Printing a 9-by-9-inch, 334-page hardcover book in China costs about 44 to 45 cents now, with another 3 cents for shipping, says Goodwin. The same book costs 65 to 68 cents to make in the U.S.

"If costs go up by half, it's about the same price as in the U.S. And you don't have 30 days on the water in shipping," he says.

Even with recent increases, wages for Chinese workers are still a fraction of those for Americans. But studies do show China's overall cost advantage is shrinking.

Labor costs have been climbing about 15 percent a year since a 2008 labor contract law that made workers more aware of their rights. Tax preferences for foreign companies ended in 2007. Land, water, energy and shipping costs are on the rise.

In its most recent survey, issued in February, restructuring firm Alix Partners found that overall China was more expensive than Mexico, India, Vietnam, Russia and Romania.

Mexico, in particular, has gained an edge thanks to the North American Free Trade Agreement and fast, inexpensive trucking, says Mike Romeri, an executive with Emptoris, the consulting firm.

Makers of toys and trinkets, Christmas trees and cheap shoes already have folded by the thousands or moved away, some to Vietnam, Indonesia or Cambodia. But those countries lack the huge work force, infrastructure and markets China can offer, and most face the same labor issues as China.

So far, the biggest impact appears to be in and around Shenzhen, a former fishing village in Guangdong province, bordering Hong Kong, that is home to thousands of export manufacturers.

That includes Taiwan-based Foxconn Technology, a supplier of iPhones and iPads to Apple Inc. Foxconn responded to a spate of suicides at its 400,000-worker Shenzhen complex with pay hikes that more than doubled basic monthly worker salaries to $290. Strike-stricken suppliers to Honda Motor Co. and Toyota Motor Corp., among many others, also have hiked wages.

Foxconn refused repeated requests for comment on plans to move much of its manufacturing capacity to central China's impoverished Henan province, where a local government website has advertised for tens of thousands of workers on its behalf.

But among other projects farther inland, Foxconn is teaming up with some of the biggest global computer makers to build what may be the world's largest laptop production hub in Chongqing, a western China city of 32 million where labor costs are estimated to be 20 to 40 percent lower than in coastal cities.

Given the intricate supply chains and logistics systems that have helped make southern China an export manufacturing powerhouse, such changes won't be easy.

But for manufacturers looking to boost sales inside fast-growing China, shifting production to the inland areas where many migrant workers come from, and costs are lower, offers the most realistic alternative.

"The new game is to find a way to do the domestic market," says Goodwin.

Many factories in Foshan, another city in Guangdong that saw strikes at auto parts plants supplying Japan's Honda, have left in the past few months, mostly moving inland to Henan, Hunan and Jiangxi, said Lin Liyuan, dean at the privately run Institute of Territorial Economics in Guangzhou.

Massive investments in roads, railways and other infrastructure are reducing the isolation of the inland cities, part of a decade-old "Develop the West" strategy aimed at shrinking the huge, politically volatile gap in wealth between city dwellers and the country's 600 million farmers.

Gambling that the unrest will not spill over from foreign-owned factories, China's leaders are using the chance to push investment in regions that have lagged the country's industrial boom.

They have little choice. Many of today's factory workers have higher ambitions than their parents, who generally saved their earnings from assembling toys and television sets for retirement in their rural hometowns. They are also choosier about wages and working conditions. "The conflicts are challenging the current set-up of low-wage, low-tech manufacturing, and may catalyze the transformation of China's industrial sector," said Yu Hai, a sociology professor at Shanghai's Fudan University.

___

Associated Press researcher Ji Chen contributed to this report.

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SHANGHAI — Factory workers demanding better wages and working conditions are hastening the eventual end of an era of cheap costs that helped make southern coastal China the world's factory floor...
SHANGHAI — Factory workers demanding better wages and working conditions are hastening the eventual end of an era of cheap costs that helped make southern coastal China the world's factory floor...
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08:52 PM on 08/14/2010
The Cheap 'Made-In-China' Era is end, because labor and raw material costs rise.
http://www.madeinchinab2b.com
04:39 PM on 07/29/2010
Wait a minute. People demand rights??? But who's gonna make the cheap stuff?
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07:43 AM on 07/14/2010
The land of dreams continues to embrace and peddle, here and abroad, The American Dream. And so it goes in the petty minds of the CEOs' narcissistic pursuits to get their $55 million a year up to $60 million, vampires of the economic lifeblood of the planet.
04:45 AM on 07/12/2010
Boo Hoo for the investment class, productive consumer units expect more than 14 hours of work a day for 50 cents an hour!
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John Kennedy
05:36 PM on 07/13/2010
50 cents an hour? Wages are as low as 12 cents an hour in China. This is a BS story if ever I heard one.
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MichaelMcKLA
I'm moving to Pandora.
02:45 AM on 07/12/2010
Well...all is not lost. We still make hamburgers and pr0n.
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steve11407
pending approval and won't be displayed until ...
02:05 AM on 07/12/2010
Why don't the eco people get ahold of Wal-Mart and other mega stores that sell the cheap products designed with premature failure in mind or has no worthwhile use to anybody like 2cent toys. All this crap is filling our landfills with usless $hit from China et.al.. I saw a $29 DVD player in WalMart. How long do you suppose it be before its in a landfill somewhere.
03:17 AM on 07/12/2010
Its not legal to fill landfills with electronics, most if not all service companies dispose of these devices, most of the boards are remanufactured, components and plastics are recycled but thanks for your concern.
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GraniteSkyline
I wish you happiness!
04:11 AM on 07/12/2010
At my local landfill you have to go through a lot of paperwork and procedures to drop of hazardous materials like asbestos. It even has to be delivered to the landfill in a separate truck (for an additional fee). Then they dump it in with the rest of the trash.

So stop fantasizing about the integrity of landfills.
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02:05 AM on 07/12/2010
Well, now that our economy is in the tank and college-educated workers are fighting for minium-wage positions at McDonalds while the Chinese have discovered the power of collective bargaining... what did you expect?

WE are the new cheap labor. Welcome to the Third World.
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Zoydzz
AZ Motto - Up to the highest bidder.
03:09 AM on 07/12/2010
I think there is more devaluation to come - we haven't hit bottom yet.
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GraniteSkyline
I wish you happiness!
04:14 AM on 07/12/2010
That's exactly what I was going to say!

Congrats! We are the new China!
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01:44 AM on 07/12/2010
We all need to learn to buy when we need someting, and not just out of spending our money( that we may or may not have). look at walmart trillion dollar sales of chinese junks in our country alone.
I think we are addicted to shopping. I hope something positive comes out of recession and we all learn to make smarter choices.
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John Kennedy
05:38 PM on 07/13/2010
and let us hope the American people will learn one day, someday very soon, to make smarter choices when we vote. But I have little, little hope of that day coming in my lifetime...
01:25 AM on 07/12/2010
The wages have definitely increased in China, but it's probably not enough to move jobs outside of China still.

My family runs a computer engineering company in Shanghai so I am familiar with salaries in the software industry: The wages for a new college graduated, entry level software engineers have risen from 6500 Yuan (1,000 USD) per month two years ago to roughly 8000 Yuan (1,200 USD) today. That is still a far cry from software engineer in the US (average 4,000 USD per month + benefits) or even that of India (1500-2,000 USD per month). The entry level US engineers are not much different than the Chinese ones. The US however has tons of very experienced engineers who are capable of leadership, that's something which China and India does not have many of because the Indian and Chinese software industry boom only started to form less than 20 years ago.

I have heard that the increase in wages in the manufacturing is similar (FOXCONN increased wages for their laborers by 30%). There are still many reasons why manufacturing won't move off China though:

1) The wages in China are still much cheaper than developed nations
2) For the other developing nations such as Vietnam and India, the infrastructure (roads, ports, etc) are not yet set up to carry the demand which China is currently responsible for. The expertise (yes running a thousand people manufacturing plant is not as easy as one thinks) is also not there.
01:57 AM on 07/12/2010
You might want to take a closer look at those "tons of very experienced engineers" that the US boasts, quite a lot of them are NOT homegrown. In fact they are from China and India, which has been producing high quality engineers, physicians and other scientists for a whole lot longer than 20 years. They just exported them, while they began in the past few decades to attempt to retain some, and those exports came home to start businesses.
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02:09 AM on 07/12/2010
So your family owns one of those American companies that has shipped its jobs overseas to procure cheap labor. Nice that you're not ashamed to admit it.
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John Kennedy
05:42 PM on 07/13/2010
It could be that he is Chinese and his family operates a Chinese company selling goods to the USA.
01:10 AM on 07/12/2010
this is good news, as the next generation becomes more educated and aware of what is a fair wage, it can only benefit everyone in the long run.
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John Kennedy
06:04 PM on 07/13/2010
This is good news? I don't understand.
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MrBadger
01:04 AM on 07/12/2010
Yeah, well, I wouldn't drop the Chinese lessons just yet.
01:59 AM on 07/12/2010
If only we could convince some people to start the English lessons, "Amerikkin" isn't quite cutting it in the global market when everyone else speaks our own language better than most of our children.
12:49 AM on 07/12/2010
cheap junk

stop sending american manufacturing jobs offshore

Americans understand Quality is Job #1 and manufacturing cheap junk in order to generate profit for shareholders is a liability and not an asset
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Kiri sute gomen
Yes, they are being paid to post that.
12:58 AM on 07/12/2010
I do not agree with you. If Americans were not focused on costs then stores such as Wal-Mart would be providing higher quality merchandise at a higher price. As consumers we are so fixated on price that we bought ourselves out of jobs.
02:01 AM on 07/12/2010
It's a simple fact, you buy the best mousetrap on the market, and American consumers certainly understand the importance of quality. Sadly those involved in manufacturing in America seem to have forgotten that. Build the better mousetrap and we'll all buy it, expect us to buy poor quality items clothed in a flag and we'll all be in trouble. How about we get back to making American quality something to be respected and revered?
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Zoydzz
AZ Motto - Up to the highest bidder.
03:07 AM on 07/12/2010
Sadly though most Americans have come to accept mediocrity and throw away products - ink jet printers - to be precise. It's an understanding that for lower prices Americans will accept lower quality not really expecting much more - and as long as Americans accept this as the standard manufacturers will continue to make what sells.
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John Kennedy
06:23 PM on 07/13/2010
American companies are making high quality products - IN CHINA! What you don't understand is that Chinese companies didn't out-compete us, our American companies sold us out!

Build a better mousetrap? Hell, the better mousetrap will be invented in the USA and made in China! Just look at ANY Apple product as an example of what I am talking about.

You need to think beyond the ideology and look at the reality of the economic mess we're in...we as a nation have been sold on free trade and Globalization. Follow the money trail to see the lies in the mythology in these concepts..
ajwriter
Healthy equilibrium, healthy democracy
12:31 AM on 07/12/2010
Well, good, we really need to remember how to make things in this country again. We can make up for higher wages with a little ingenuity. (And, if we finally get some sense knocked into us with better, cheaper, universal healthcare like they have in Germany or Switzerland, which will make for a healthier happier workforce and free businesses from the staggering costs. American workers are so productive, all we would need would be to fix our dysfunctional healthcare system -- which the recent law did NOT do -- to make making things here attractive again.)

This is a great article about this issue (our making things again):
http://memagazine.asme.org/Articles/2010/april/InputOutput.cfm
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iskra
Natural enemy of sharks and tro//s
12:22 AM on 07/12/2010
Next thing you know the Chinese will start demanding companies stop giving them toxic environments to work and live in.
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Kiri sute gomen
Yes, they are being paid to post that.
12:58 AM on 07/12/2010
Socialism in a Communist country? LOL, sorry I could not resist.
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emh
12:19 AM on 07/12/2010
"I have 15 major clients. My job is to give the best advice I can give. I tell it like it is. I tell them, put your helmet on, it's going to get ugly," said Goodwin, who says dissatisfied workers and hard-to-predict exchange rates are his top worries.

those pesky dissatisfied chinese peasants trying to get in the way of america's right to wal-mart style overconsumption! how dare they demand way less than fair wages???