. Earth Science News .
TRADE WARS
Rising China wages could spell end to cheap labour: experts

China export hub Shenzhen to raise minimum wage
Beijing (AFP) June 9, 2010 - The southern Chinese export hub Shenzhen said Wednesday it will raise its minimum wage by up to 22 percent, joining other cities around the country in hiking salaries following a wave of labour unrest. The minimum wage in the city will rise to 1,100 yuan (161 dollars) a month, an increase of 10 percent in some districts and up to 22 percent in others, an announcement on the city government's website said. Part-time employees will see their hourly wage grow to 9.8 yuan. The increases take effect in July.

State-run Xinhua news agency quoted the head of Shenzhen's human resources bureau saying the city hoped the increase could push companies to upgrade. "The pay rise will increase costs for labour-intensive firms but I hope those companies will take this as an opportunity to speed up technological innovation and industrial upgrading to boost competitiveness," bureau director Wang Min was quoted saying. China has reacted to the recent labour unrest by launching a round of minimum wage hikes across the nation, reflecting concern among top leaders that frustrated workers could trigger wider social turmoil. Shenzhen has been at the heart of the labour concerns following 10 worker suicides at a massive plant in the city run by IT giant Foxconn, which counts heavyweights Apple, Dell, Sony and Panasonic among its clients.

Foxconn has given staff a 70 percent pay rise after mounting accusations that the suicides were due to low pay and high pressure on its workers to produce. The labour strife and wage hikes have raised concerns that the days of cheap goods emanating from China, the "workshop of the world", could be numbered and put a squeeze on corporate profits. Shenzhen was the first of the "special economic zones" established three decades ago to pioneer the economic reforms of former leader Deng Xiaoping, and has grown dramatically since then, powered by cheap factory labour.
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) June 9, 2010
The days of endless cheap labour in the "workshop of the world" could be numbered as a shortage of workers and government fears of social unrest drive up wages in China, experts say.

A spate of suicides at Taiwanese high-tech firm Foxconn and an unprecedented strike at Honda's auto parts factory in southern China suggest that employers can no longer take their workforces for granted after decades of rapid growth.

Beijing has reacted to the labour unrest by launching a round of minimum wage hikes across the nation, reflecting concern among top leaders that frustrated workers could trigger wider social turmoil.

Under President Hu Jintao, "the direction of policy has been towards greater concern about income distribution, less emphasis on growth at all costs", Tsinghua University economist Patrick Chovanec said.

The labour problems have received widespread coverage by state-run media and sparked statements of concern from official trade unions -- essentially an adjunct of the communist regime.

Nearly a quarter of Chinese employees have not had a raise in five years, according to the All-China Federation of Trade Unions. Inflation has stayed low, despite blistering economic growth during the period.

But IT giant Foxconn -- which counts heavyweights Apple, Dell, Sony and Panasonic among its clients -- has now given staff a 70 percent pay rise after 11 suicides among its vast Chinese workforce.

Honda, Japan's number two carmaker, last week offered a 24 percent rise to workers to end a crippling strike that had brought the company's vehicle production in China to a halt for more than a week.

In another case, Taiwanese handset component maker Merry Electronics Co. raised the basic wages of 7,000 staff at its factory in the southern city of Shenzhen by 17 percent to end a brief strike, Taiwanese media reported.

"If you are a factory owner in Guangdong (southern China), you have got a few things working against you now and you have definitely got to start making it a bit more attractive to make labour come to you," said Brian Jackson, a senior analyst at the Royal Bank of Canada in Hong Kong.

"All the indications are this is something that is going to continue in the months ahead -- assuming you don't have a big impact from European problems on the manufacturing sector," he said, alluding to eurozone economic worries.

But some Chinese-owned factories fear the wage pressure could hurt the vast manufacturing industry as it bounces back from the global financial crisis.

"We are all worried about the cost push and how that will continue to have a higher stress on manufacturers who export," said Jimmy Kwok, managing director of Rambo Chemicals, which employs 400 workers at a plant in Shenzhen.

He said higher labour costs might force manufacturers to pull back on planned investments in new equipment, to lay off staff or to move their operations to regions where labour costs less.

As China's economy surges, wage demands will continue to pose a headache for companies, forcing some to relocate or pass on the cost through higher prices for their toys and electronic gadgets, analysts say.

The market verdict against Foxconn's parent company has been brutal. Hon Hai Precision Industry has lost billions of dollars in market valuation as its share price has slumped since the steep wage hikes were announced.

For Arthur Kroeber, managing director of the Dragonomics consultancy in Beijing, the laws of supply and demand are reawakening in China.

"The simple reason for the wage pressure is that the supply of young workers who are typically the people who move into these factories in coastal China is shrinking," he said.

Huge government spending on infrastructure projects in central and western China and increasing relocation of factories inland are encouraging workers to stay home, where the cost of living is cheaper and they have family support.

Kroeber cautioned it was too soon to say workers have gained the upper hand in one-party China.

"It is still the case that there are lots of workers, employers still get to set the rules, workers do not have the right to independently organise, so it is early days yet," he said.



Share This Article With Planet Earth
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit
YahooMyWebYahooMyWeb GoogleGoogle FacebookFacebook



Related Links
Global Trade News



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


TRADE WARS
Taiwan's Foxconn boss: Tough, bold and now also caring
Taipei (AFP) June 9, 2010
Vision and boldness are the qualities that turned Foxconn founder Terry Gou into Taiwan's richest man, but he needs to dig deep to reposition the IT giant after a series of suicides at its China plants. The 59-year-old son of a policeman has already signalled a more caring attitude as the factory deaths throw a spotlight on what critics say is a harsh, militaristic management style at the te ... read more







The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2010 - SpaceDaily. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement