What is the issue?
As the threat of a trade war looms between China and the US, many companies shift their manufacturing bases from china.
What are the recent issues that affect china?
- China become increasingly prosperous with its manufacturing focussing more on valuable items like electronics.
- This raised the demand for highly skilled labourers and consequently their salaries have risen.
- Rents in China’s top industrial zones have escalated, adding to the costs.
- These factors undermined the chief attraction of china as a low-cost manufacturing base for giant corporations.
- Recent punitive tariffs of US have come as a final blow for some US companies’ China operations.
- Companies like Adidas have been cutting its production in China for several years now.
- Most of the top US tech companies make a large percentage of their products or components in China.
- There are concerns raised on the security risks behind ICT products made in china by their rival competitors.
- These factors made companies to shift their base to new sites where wages and rents are still cheap.
Where did the shift happen?
- Vietnam attracted over $11 billion in investment in the first six months of this year and it serves as a potential alternative.
- Adidas has cut production in China and now makes over 40 per cent of its shoes in Vietnam.
- Similarly, camera-maker Olympus shut its factory in Shenzhen earlier this year and has moved more production to Vietnam.
- Samsung accounted for a quarter of Vietnam’s exports last year and over 30 per cent of Vietnam’s foreign investment came from South Korea this year.
- Geographical location closer to China and South Korea, along with young, educated workforce and political stability plays a vital role here.
- The other country getting a lot of attention from global investors is Indonesia.
- Though it was badly hit by the Asian Crisis 20 years ago, with its inventive start-ups like Go-Jek, it becomes a thriving economy in recent times.
Where does India stand?
- With a huge market presence and smaller towns turning into big buyers, companies like Amazon, Facebook and Google increased its focus towards India.
- The CII in its report said US tariffs on Chinese products could make Indian machinery, electrical equipment, vehicles, transport parts and chemicals more competitive in the US market.
- Depreciation of the rupee could also help the cause in promoting exports.
- Also, the hike in Chinese duties on some US goods may make Indian exports more competitive in the Chinese market.
- Yet, China isn’t about to lose its status as the world’s factory anytime soon, since China’s formal manufacturing sector was estimated to employ 120 million workers in 2014.
- India also faces severe competition with its Asian counterparts like Malaysia, Bangladesh, Cambodia and Sri Lanka, when it comes to manufacturing.
- India’s vast internal market has to be complemented with a vibrant manufacturing base and a skilled workforce, while “Make in India” needs reinvigoration in this regard.
Source: Business Line