LOGIN | MEMBER | SITEMAP | CONTACT US
           
           
          Focus  News about Taiwan  Daily News  Latest Update  
          Special Reports  Comments Weekly Brief 
          Press Conference of Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council
          Focus
           
          News about Taiwan
           
             Daily News
           
          Latest Updates
           
          Weekly Brief
           
          Special Reports
           
          Press Conference of Taiwan Affairs Office of the State Council
          Why China's private businesses less keen on manufacturing?
             晩豚: 2011-03-11 10:37         ン: 醴         輳苅 Xinhua

           

          BEIJING, March 10 (Xinhua) -- Over the past three decades, Zong Qinghou, now the richest man in China, accumulated every cent of his wealth from selling bottled water and fast food. However, things are changing.

          Zong, the founder and chairman of Wahaha Group, China's largest beverage producer, said he is going to channel tens of billions of yuan to real estate and mining sectors.

          "Industrialists are finding it harder and harder to make money. Last year, soaring raw material prices eroded at least 5 billion yuan of our profits, as the prices of sugar and milk powder doubled," Zong said during the ongoing annual session of the National People's Congress (NPC), the nation's top legislature.

          In 2009, Wahaha's business revenue was less than 40 billion yuan, but its profits stood at 8.7 billion yuan. A year later, its revenue expanded to 55 billion yuan, but profits shrank to slightly more than 6 billion yuan.

          Zong is among a handful of Chinese private entrepreneurs who are loyal to manufacturing. Even during the peak of the property market, when prices increased 10 percent a month, Zong said he would not have stepped into the "upstart" industry since manufacturing is tangible and bubble-free.

          However, as labor shortage worsened and inflation increased faster than expected, a number of manufacturers decided to turn to other investments for greater and easier returns. Zong is no exception.

          Zong's shift reflects a common problem facing China's private capital. Due to pressures from escalating labor costs, inflation and excessive liquidity, manufacturers are looking for other ways out.

          China's remarkable economic rise over the past three decades is largely built on the booming manufacturing industry. A vast pool of cheap and diligent labor force has made the nation the world's workshop.

          The east coastal province of Zhejiang, where Wahaha Group is based, is home to China's most vibrant manufacturing-based private businesses and is one of the richest provinces in China.

          In 2009, more than one-third of private capital was invested in the property industry. Meanwhile, the manufacturing sector, which was led by private businesses, saw investment grow by only 7.4 percent from a year earlier.

          "Private businesses in Zhejiang now allocate their money this way: one-third for manufacturing, one-third for real estate and one-third for financial investment," said Zhou Guanxin, a researcher with the Zhejiang Federation of Industry and Commerce. Investments in the last two sectors are on the rise, he added.

          "It is not surprising at all that private businesses are shifting from manufacturing, because capital chases profits in nature," said Cheng Enfu, an NPC deputy and chairman of the World Association of Political Economy.

          The profit margin of the real estate industry is at least 30 percent. Financial investment also generates handsome returns. By contrast, profits from the manufacturing industry have been squeezed paper-thin.

          Although China has become the world's largest exporter, profit margins are less than three percent. The situation could get worse with a stronger Chinese currency, Cheng said.

          Traditional manufacturing has little room to expand. More capacity will not necessarily increase market share, said Chen Xinwei, executive president of the Seven Wolves Holding Group, a Quanzhou-based garment maker in southeastern China's Fujian Province.

          China has looked to transform the country's economic development pattern as a major task in the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015), upgrading resources and labor-intensive manufacturing to a technology- and innovation-based economy.

          However, private manufacturers are short of impetus to test this strategic and tough transformation, said Zhou Dewen, chairman of the Wenzhou Council for Promotion of Small- and Medium-sized Enterprises.

          Wenzhou city in eastern province of Zhejiang is the birthplace of China's private economy. It contains dozens of production bases, which churn out items ranging from shoes to electrical appliances.

          "It is getting harder and harder to maintain good profits from making shoes and other small commodities. We are not going to put more money in it," said Zheng Shengtao, head of the Wenzhou Sunlead Corporation.

           

            臥心/l燕u
           
          o鮪}猟n
          Copyright Chinataiwan.org .All Rights Reserved
          麼嫋岌幃学庁医 厘才弌僣壓ktv瓜匯蛤槻伏弌傍| 槻涛嗔詢芭厖番仄篦埜何了| 忽坪娼瞳消消消消消消97釘釘| 戟諾富絃瓜間寄値倉序繁互賠| 天胆壓濆杰患斷子| 嗽寄嗽間嗽訪a雫谷頭窒継心| 繁繁牢壽繁繁牢壽繁繁| 寄稟暴驚盞冓啼75| 戟諾富絃繁曇消消消消消| 天胆嶄猟忖鳥匯曝| 卅繁弼忝栽消消爺爺繁返繁翆| 築孟篇撞匯曝屈曝| 忽恢娼瞳消窒継議仔利嫋| www忽恢娼瞳| 晩恢岱鷹触1触2触眉触膨壓| 冉巖忽恢天巖忝栽997消消| 心篇撞窒継利嫋| 忽恢匯曝屈曝眉曝互賠篇撞| 來弼訪握來弼訪握利嫋| 翌忽溺來喘匯斤幻徨娼匣伏徨哈尸咏| 嶄猟忖鳥晩昆眉雫頭| 恷仟69銘忽恢撹繁娼瞳篇撞| 冉巖娼瞳及屈匈| 娼瞳忽恢www| 忽恢嶄猟崙捲某沃総窃| 励埖翆翆卅繁利| 忽恢互賠徭田篇撞| www.天胆弼| 撹畠互賠篇撞窒継鉱心| 消消娼瞳冉巖娼瞳忽恢弼翆| 天胆忽恢壓瀛啼| 冉巖娼瞳唹垪消消消消消| 娼瞳匯曝屈曝消消消消消消利娼 | 消消娼瞳忽恢冉巖AV涙鷹裕椙| 天胆晩昆忝栽利| 卅繁消消忝栽豊栽忝栽消消| 析望字69娼瞳撹窒継篇撞| 忽恢壓濔瞳匯曝屈曝壓濘 | 涙鷹繁曇匯曝屈曝眉曝窒継心| 消消娼瞳天胆晩昆娼瞳| 天胆繁曇娼瞳匯曝屈曝眉曝|