February 11, 2006
DEVELOPED NATIONS DON'T ASSEMBLE PARTS (via Tom Morin):
Some Assembly Needed: China as Asia Factory (DAVID BARBOZA, 2/09/06, NY Times)
Hundreds of workers at a sprawling Japanese-owned Hitachi factory here are fashioning plates of glass and aluminum into shiny computer disks, wrapping them in foil. The products are destined for the United States, where they will arrive like billions of other items, labeled "made in China."But often these days, "made in China" is mostly made elsewhere — by multinational companies in Japan, South Korea, Taiwan and the United States that are using China as the final assembly station in their vast global production networks.
Analysts say this evolving global supply chain, which usually tags goods at their final assembly stop, is increasingly distorting global trade figures and has the effect of turning China into a bigger trade threat than it may actually be. That kind of distortion is likely to appear again on Feb. 10, when the Commerce Department announces the American trade deficit with China. By many estimates, it swelled to a record $200 billion last year.
It may look as if China is getting the big payoff from trade. But over all, some of the biggest winners are consumers in the United States and other advanced economies who have benefited greatly as a result of the shift in the final production of toys, clothing, electronics and other goods from elsewhere in Asia to a cheaper China.
American multinational corporations and other foreign companies, including retailers, are the largely invisible hands behind the factories pumping out these inexpensive goods. And they are reaping the bulk of profits from the trade. [...]
Foreign expertise has been critical as manufacturing supply chains become increasingly complex, involving countries' each producing components that are then shipped to China for assembly. Such a system can render global trade statistics misleading, and some experts say that a more apt label would be "assembled in China."
"The biggest beneficiary of all this is the United States," said Dong Tao, an economist at UBS in Hong Kong. "A Barbie doll costs $20, but China only gets about 35 cents of that."
All of the brain power -- which is what pays well -- is supplied by America. You just can't pay Americans as little as folks deserve for merely assembling the stuff we design. Posted by Orrin Judd at February 11, 2006 8:55 PM
People who never see an assembly plant will soon lose the ability to design. You have to know what's manufacturable, and that's what the assemblers know.
Posted by: pj at February 11, 2006 9:05 PMNo, they don't. Theyt assemnble what we tell them to, how we tell them to.
Posted by: oj at February 11, 2006 9:13 PM"design engineers"
Posted by: toe at February 11, 2006 11:30 PMThese days, pretty much anything is manufacturable. I really don't think that's a concern.
Posted by: Timothy at February 11, 2006 11:54 PMPJ
If the Chinese come up with ideas relating to manufacture that are better than those presently in operation, then capital (unless hindered in some fashion) will flow to that process and the Chinese will become richer. So will all people using that product.
Seems like a great system to me. Just like Adam Smith described (decribed, not invented). If those are the premises and rules the Chinese choose then they won't be antagonistic to the US or vice versa. Why fight the man making your life better?
Posted by: h-man at February 12, 2006 5:53 AMBut they won't, just as the other couintries we allowed to assemble stuff didn't.
Posted by: oj at February 12, 2006 7:52 AM