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What's Your Next Move as China Hikes Wages?

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SP
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What's Your Next Move as China Hikes Wages?
SP   9/13/2012 5:14:50 AM
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Its inevitable that wages remain so low. With the rise in the cost of basic needs, the wages need to go up. No one can stop that. The companies also have to give in. Because they cannot move to another location so easily. May be the manufacturers would look for other areas where they can get still cheaper labor.

Barbara Jorgensen
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China wage hikes
Barbara Jorgensen   9/12/2012 9:44:57 AM
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One of the issues here that is also largely ignored, at least in high-tech, is that labor is only a small fraction of the overall cost of manufacturing. Automated manufacturing and assembly lines do not require a lot of human contact. Now, if Foxconn insists on assembling everything by hand, then labor costs will be significant. Rather than pull out of China if costs increase, non-China manufacturers should consider automation. It will still be less expensive than closing down or disassembling entire factories.

Jacob
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Re: What's your next move?
Jacob   9/12/2012 7:00:08 AM
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Barbar, it's true that at initial stage labour wages in China are cheaper. When industrial growth happens, more peoples got employed and their life style also got changed. More over they also have a mentality that MNC s are utilizing their man power for profit generation and they also need a share of that. That's the main reason for period hike in wages. The other thing is China is a Communist socialist country and they won't encourage Capitalistic movements.

Jacob
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Chinese labour
Jacob   9/12/2012 6:55:47 AM
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Jennifer, I don't think the Chinese labors sectors are no longer being attractive. Industrial survey reports are saying that for the last 02 years, labour costs are increased considerably when compare with the previous block of 2007-2009. If the trend continues like this, companies may rethink about investing in China.

Ariella
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Re: What's your next move?
Ariella   9/11/2012 5:08:47 PM
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@Barbara good point. I'd say any major investment like that should be made for the long-haul and based on multiple factors -- not just the cost of labor.

Clairvoyant
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Re: What's your next move?
Clairvoyant   9/11/2012 2:17:34 PM
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Companies that have kept their manufacturing in North America may gain from this. Competitors that have manufacturing in China will end up having higher costs.

Barbara Jorgensen
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What's your next move?
Barbara Jorgensen   9/11/2012 11:13:38 AM
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I share your frustration on this topic. I hate to think the collective electronics industry is so naive as to think wages would remain low forever. And now that companies have invested so much to move there, are they just going to pick up and move? Any company that went into China purely for the low-cost labor deserves what it gets. China is  strategic location, not just a labor pool, and as such should be entered deliberately and for the long haul.

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