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Cos brace for End of made-in-China era.

GoFlyKiteNow

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Cos brace for end of made-in-China era

Associated Press:
Posted: Fri Jul 09 2010, 09:18 hrs 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 US 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 US.

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 US from China. In some cases, the US 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 US

"If costs go up by half, it's about the same price as in the US 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 per cent 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.
 
The strike is necessary to increase the wages of the hard-working production workers.

They truly earn pittance.

And in such a short notice, there is no way the factories can consider moving.

Besides, the end users will end up paying the increased cost.

So, another reason of inflation coming.
 
In any case, as I see it, the writing is on the wall for China.
How the world changes and how the world perceptions change over a short period of time. !
 
If chinese wages go up, there will be fewer chinese willing to come to Spore to work. So where will the PAP get their cheap labour :confused:
 
If chinese wages go up, there will be fewer chinese willing to come to Spore to work. So where will the PAP get their cheap labour :confused:
VIETNAM! The no. of Vietnamese and Thai and increasing employed here.
 
VIETNAM! The no. of Vietnamese and Thai and increasing employed here.

Nabei, Chinese are flooding the coffeeshop everywhere, and if they are being replace by other foreigners, how many fucking language do I have to learn to get my order of coffee. :mad:

Seriously, it is not that the multinational are exiting China voluntary because of cost. I believe it is because those Chinese are getting better and pushes out these compaines... look at Google.
 
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