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Thursday, January 23, 2020, 15:02
Multinational firms in China move up the global value chain
By Shi Jing in Shanghai
Thursday, January 23, 2020, 15:02 By Shi Jing in Shanghai

Major players embracing transformation into modern service industries, high-end manufacturers

Visitors play games at a booth of Nintendo Switch at the China Digital Entertainment Expo and Conference, also known as ChinaJoy, in Shanghai. (PHOTO / AGENCIES)

The operations of multinational companies in China have changed over time, moving up the global value chain as the country has diverted its focus.

China is no longer the world's factory. Today, it is a cradle embracing and nurturing advanced technologies, a production base for more sophisticated and higher value-added products, and one of the best choices for regional headquarters and research and development centers, said experts.

In early July, Japanese electronics company Nintendo Co Ltd said it would start making its Switch video game consoles in Vietnam this year, transferring some of its production operations from China. But only one month later, Nintendo announced that it would team up with China's leading technology giant Tencent Holdings Ltd, which would power Nintendo's online services in China, operate a localized version of the Switch online shop and provide electronic payment services for the games.

China’s worldleading position in mobile internet and emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence is a major attraction to multinational companies

Song Qinghui, an economist

In early December, Nintendo announced that its signature Switch consoles would be officially available in China on Dec 10.

Dong Yan, a research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, finds such moves reasonable for business operations, as traditional manufacturing in China, including digital camera production, has been influenced by the fast development of the digital economy and the internet. Vietnam is a better choice given its lower production costs and large young labor force, he said.

After a successful second fiscal quarter last year, Brian Goldner, chief executive officer of the world's largest toymaker Hasbro, announced in late July that the company would reduce its toy production in China and keep it under 50 percent this year due to global trade uncertainties. India and Vietnam would be the new production powerhouses, he said.

But Goldner also stressed that China will continue to be a major producer of quality toys and will remain "an important constituent of the company's global network".

Giovanni Pino, director of the Australian sourcing service provider Sourci, said China would be producing more high-quality equipment, more higher priced and higher value goods as the country moves up the value chain and its manpower develops greater technical skills.

Pino's observation has been proved by events in the consumer sector in China. World leading footwear giant Adidas has halved production of footwear in China since 2010, shifting manufacturing of this category to Vietnam and Indonesia.

But as noted by business media Quartz, China has started to move up the value chain to produce more pricey products instead of churning out Nike and Adidas shoes as it did a decade ago. Luxury brands such as Burberry, Armani and Prada have transferred parts of their production operations to China, according to Quartz.

As explained by Cherrie Shi, senior counsel of legal firm FenXun Partners, major reasons for multinational companies moving their manufacturing bases from China to counties in Southeast Asia include China's rising labor costs, overcapacity in heavy industry, and stricter rules and regulations on environmental protection. On the other hand, technology development and skills of the labor force have improved over time in China.

"Therefore, the transfer has been quite noticeable in heavy and labor intensive industries such as manufacturing and consumer products," she said.

Employees work at the plant of German heating and sun roof solutions provider Webasto in Chongqing. (PHOTO / CHINA NEWS SERVICE)

But she also pointed out that most Southeast Asian countries will not be able to build a complete supporting industrial chain or system in the near term. Meanwhile, China's central government has been making continued efforts to attract foreign capital to invest in high-end manufacturing and modern service industries in the country.

"In this sense, manufacturing of low-tech and low value-added products will be moved out of China at a faster pace in the short term. But for high-end manufacturing and high value-added products, there is no sign of transfer to Southeast Asia at this moment," she added.

Since 2015, the central government has promoted the country's manufacturing transformation and upgrading, aiming at a higher production level not only for the consumer goods sector, but also large equipment.

Statistics from the National Bureau of Statistics showed that the added value of the high-tech manufacturing sector increased 9 percent year-on-year during the first half last year. The growth rate for emerging and strategic industries was 7.7 percent. Both sectors have registered faster growth than the 6 percent industry average.

Meanwhile, China has never stopped its efforts to attract foreign investment and multinational companies. The negative list mechanism, which was promoted from the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone to the whole country in 2018, the Foreign Investment Law, which took effect on the first day of this year, and the ongoing financial opening-up have all facilitated multinational companies' deeper reach into the country.

According to the Ministry of Commerce, the actual utilized foreign capital was more than 683.2 billion yuan (US$98.1 billion) for the first three quarters of last year, up 6.5 percent from a year earlier. Of the registered foreign capital, 29.8 percent was invested in high-end technologies.

As the frontier for many of the country's first reform and openingup attempts, Shanghai has always attracted many multinational companies. Shanghai rolled out the first batch of favorable policies to attract the regional headquarters of multinational companies 17 years ago. So far, a total of 710 multinational companies have set up their regional headquarters in Shanghai while another 453 firms have built their R&D centers in the city, according to the Shanghai Municipal Commission of Commerce.

The Shanghai facility of German heating and sun roof solutions provider Webasto now works as the company's regional management headquarters and R&D center. Zhang Lihua, deputy president of Webasto Roof Systems China Ltd, said the company's China R&D team is working together with its clients for the development of luminous glass, the first time that China will lead in the development of a product.

"Shanghai working as a hub for both management and technology talents is one of the major reasons for establishing regional headquarters here," he said.

French industrial group TLD chose to build its regional headquarters in Shanghai in early August. Shanghai's good transport connections to other parts of the Asia-Pacific region, the large scale of the Chinese market, and the sufficient supply of manufacturing talents in Shanghai, have made the city the perfect choice for the regional headquarters for TLD, said Thomas Dorn, the company's Asia chief executive officer.

"Multinational companies have shown their confidence in China's human resources supply and investment environment by setting up R&D centers in the country. China's world-leading position in mobile internet and emerging technologies such as artificial intelligence is a major attraction to multinational companies," said economist Song Qinghui.

shijing@chinadaily.com.cn


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