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What's Your Next Move as China Hikes Wages?

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Jennifer Baljko
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Re: What's Your Next Move as China Hikes Wages?
Jennifer Baljko   9/14/2012 7:07:27 AM
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SP - Right, the cost of things just go up. It's beyond inflation, it's also taxes, utilities, food, housing, schools...of course, emerging markets would feel this pressure as well. It's not something that only happens in the U.S.

Jennifer Baljko
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Re: China wage hikes
Jennifer Baljko   9/14/2012 7:04:57 AM
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Barbara - True, labor is not the biggest overall cost and automation could provide more savings, but there are many companies that run factories 24 hours a day with a significant number of employees and demand that workers put in overtime without always paying fairly for those extra hours, etc. Then they congratulate themselves for setting up human resources programs aimed at "we listen and respond to our workers." And, even though things like Lean practices make sense and cuts out inefficiencies, when you hear things or read reports about workers being chastised for, say,  taking three seconds longer to do a task than a machine, you really got to wonder what's really happening there.

Jennifer Baljko
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Re: What's your next move?
Jennifer Baljko   9/14/2012 6:54:39 AM
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Jacob - I don't  agree with you on your last point about China's tendency to want to ward off capitalism. Yes, communism restricts social and cultural development and the government has set up a system that requires companies to jump through hoops to do business there, but the country -- and its people -- have an undeniable capitalist bend. Besides all the multi-nationals that have been lured there and the fact that the country is open to receive those billions and billions of investment dollars, Chinese people have created highly lucrative cheap-product and counterfeit businesses models for everything from shoes to purses to toys to electronics. Those models were created purely out of capitalistic intentions - these markets wouldn't exist if there wasn't a demand for them and if Westerners didn't buy these products. I see it every day - tourists walking through Barcelona pulling out their wallets to buy cheap knock-offs of all sorts of brands. And, if you think for a moment about the Chinese that have left China, I bet you'll find a whole lot of them are super industrious -- opening new shops, taking over local bars, getting the best grades in school -- probably because they want a better life that more money can buy. And, people aren't stupid... executives from all the leading MNCs make millions every year in salaries, stock options and bonuses, why shouldn't the people who produce the goods that generate high profits benefit as well?

Jennifer Baljko
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Re: What's your next move?
Jennifer Baljko   9/14/2012 6:36:41 AM
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Barbara, Ariella - Good point. Think companies with high, consumer volumes and thin margins (textiles, apparel, and some low-end electronics etc) that went to China 10 or 15 years ago for low-cost only business may have already started to shift to some of their production to places like Vietnam. I'd like to think that companies that have moved to China more recently know wages will have to factor into longer-term investments and that they went to China with more strategic focus. But, who knows.

Barbara Jorgensen
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Re: China wage hikes
Barbara Jorgensen   9/13/2012 3:53:21 PM
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@Adeniji: Cheaper in the long run. I wouldn't necessarily say better.

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: What's Your Next Move as China Hikes Wages?
Adeniji Kayode   9/13/2012 6:41:41 AM
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Sp,


you are right on that, probably manufacturers should starting looking into Africa cheaper labor or what do you think?

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: China wage hikes
Adeniji Kayode   9/13/2012 6:39:11 AM
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@Barbara,

Which means you are saying that implementation and maintenance of automation is cheaper and  better than human labor.

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: Chinese labour
Adeniji Kayode   9/13/2012 6:31:51 AM
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@Jacob,

I believe thats a possibility, there are so much products coming from China alone not to talk of other part of the world.

Adeniji Kayode
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Re: What's your next move?
Adeniji Kayode   9/13/2012 6:29:15 AM
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@Clairvoyant

You are right, Probably due to low labour cost.

prabhakar_deosthali
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prabhakar_deosthali   9/13/2012 5:20:38 AM
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It is a well known fact that the inflation in the developing economies has been at double digit figures for the past couple of decades and to compensate this inflation, the employees in all categories have to get their pay packets revised by atleast that much percentage .

So any company setting u business in a developing economy has to plan for such kind wage hike.

Many of the electronic manufacturing units in India , in fact pay their workers something more than the minimum wages stipulated by the government and the same must be true in China also as per my guess.

 

So this hike in minimum wages should not have a major impact on the off-shore manufacturing in my opinion

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