AFP, The West Australian
July 30, 2012,
Rapid wage increases are threatening China's competitiveness, but
improved productivity and other advantages mean it will continue to
attract investors, analysts say.
Labour costs in China would
match those of the United States within four years, catching up with
eurozone countries in five years and with Japan in seven, the French
bank Natixis forecast in a study.
China "will soon no longer be a
competitive place for production given the strong rise in the cost of
production", the bank said.
It is a view backed by the respected
Boston Consulting Group (BCG), which said in a study last August that
by around 2015 manufacturing in some parts of the United States would
be "just as economical as manufacturing in China".
Examples of
major manufacturers leaving China abound - BCG said US technology giant
NCR has moved its manufacture of ATMs to a factory in Columbus,
Georgia, that will employ 870 workers as of 2014.
Adidas
announced recently that it would close its only directly owned factory
in China, becoming the latest major brand to shift its manufacturing to
cheaper countries, though it maintains a network of 300 Chinese
contractors.
Chinese workers making athletic shoes are paid at
least 2000 yuan ($A300) a month, while their Adidas colleagues in
Cambodia only earn the equivalent of $A130, the German company said.
Underlining
the trend, the salaries of Chinese urban-dwellers rose 13 per cent in
the first half of 2012 compared with the same period last year, the
government said in mid-July.
Migrant workers, who are among the lowest-paid in the country, saw raises of 14.9 per cent for an average of 2200 yuan a month.
The most significant wage hikes in 2010 and 2011 often came following strikes at Japanese companies such as Toyota and Honda.
Natixis
said the increases could spur manufacturers to relocate to South and
South-East Asia, where labour costs are much lower, and could also
benefit countries such as Egypt and Morocco, or even European ones like
Romania and Bulgaria.
However, not all economists believe China will lose its manufacturing edge, thanks in part to improvements in productivity.
"Most
of the increase in wages has been offset by strong productivity
growth," said Louis Kuijs, project director at the Fung Global
Institute, a research body that specialises in Asian economies.
Worker
productivity has increased at a faster rate than wages in the southern
Pearl River Delta, the heart of China's vast manufacturing industry,
according to 200 companies surveyed early this year by Standard
Chartered Bank.
"China's share of the world's low-end exports has
started to fall after years of rapid rises in wages, land costs and
appreciation of renminbi (the currency)," said Wang Qinwei, a China
economist at Capital Economics.
"But this has been offset by a growing market share in high-end products."
Capital
Economics said in a research note published in March: "China's export
sector overall appears no less competitive now than a few years ago.
"Average margins in light industry have increased over the past three years thanks to rapid productivity growth."
China's
coastal areas offered an effective business environment that would
continue to draw investors, as would lower costs in inland provinces,
said Alistair Thornton, China economist at IHS Global Insight.
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