
FREETHINKING
China’s Shifting Fortunes
The 2008 Summer Olympic Games in Beijing were seen as China’s maturation
as a culture, an economy and a global power. They also mark
a crossroad for China. Nixon’s historic visit in 1972 set in motion events that would change—and are changing—our world. And not much has changed more in the past 30 years than manufacturing. But, this type of change is never without its challenges, and China is finding itself at a stage of maturity where its trajectory toward manufacturing/economic dominance is slowing down a bit.
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Consider these factors, and how they affect the total cost to manufacture in China: • World Trade Organization Compliance • Rising Labor Costs • VAT Rebate Suspensions • Falling U.S. Dollar • Energy Prices • Confidence China isn’t going away, and changes won’t happen overnight. Many products and services that are pulled from China will move to other low cost countries and will likely never return to the mature markets. But the advantages that China has enjoyed are indeed shifting, and U.S. manufacturers have an opportunity to capitalize by reengaging former customers and prospects to express their advantages: proximity, stability and, now, cost. |
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