2012年(464)
分类: Delphi
2012-05-19 14:56:15
The pace of change in China has been so startling that it is hard to keep up.
The old stereotypes about low-wage sweatshops are as out-of-date as
market. The next phase will be interesting: China must innovate or slow
down.
Moving inland brings all sorts of unexpected costs. Newish labour laws
in wealthy places such as Shenzhen make it costlier to shut down plants there,
for example. It can cost more to ship goods from the Chinese interior to the
coast than from Shanghai to New York. Managers and other highly skilled staff
often demand steep pay rises to move from sophisticated coastal cities to the
boondocks. A recent anti-corruption campaign there grew so violent that it
terrified legitimate businessfolk as well as crooks.
The firms investing in
China’s interior are chiefly doing so to serve consumers who live there. With so
many inland cities booming, this is an enticing market. But when it comes to
making iPads and smartphones for export, the world’s workshop will remain in
China’s coastal provinces.
In time, of course, other places will build better
roads and ports and supply chains. Eventually, they will challenge coastal
China’s grip on basic manufacturing. So if China is to flourish, its
manufacturers must move up the value chain. Rather than bolting together
sophisticated products designed elsewhere, they need to do more design work
themselves. Taking a leaf out of Germany’s book, they need to make products with
higher margins and offer services to complement them.
In 2008 it filed for
more international patents than any other firm. In a sign that at least China’s
private sector is beginning to take intellectual-property rights seriously,
Huawei is locked in bitter battles over patents, not only with multinationals
but also with ZTE, a cross-town rival that also wants to shift from being a
low-cost telecoms-equipment maker to a creator of new consumer products.
A
few Chinese firms have started to do this already. A visit to Huawei’s huge
corporate campus in Shenzhen is instructive. The firm was founded by a former
military officer and has been helped by friends in government over the years,
but it now more closely resembles a Western high-tech firm than it does a
state-backed behemoth. Its managers are top-flight. Its leaders have for several
years been learning from dozens of resident advisers from IBM and other American
consultancies. It has become highly professional, and impressively
innovative.Similarly, China industry
should also need innovation.