China Daily

Experts: China remains leading manufactur­er

Narratives of decline refuted as country embraces new constructi­ve approach

- By LIA ZHU in San Francisco liazhu@chinadaily­usa.com

China’s manufactur­ing dominance remains unshaken, evolving and adapting to the shifting global landscape despite narratives of decline, said experts who believe that perception­s of diminishin­g power often stem from anecdotes rather than data.

The rhetoric that businesses are increasing­ly looking to relocate manufactur­ing closer to their home markets to “de-risk” from China overlooks the fact that China is not only adapting to this new trend but also embracing it with a constructi­ve approach, said Kerim Antoine Kfuri, a supply chain expert.

This strategic approach that China is making to maintain its role is “near-shoring”, Kfuri said, where China extends its manufactur­ing expertise to countries closer to its target markets.

“By working diligently to be a part of global near-shoring efforts, China continues to solidify its position as the dominant player in manufactur­ing and global supply chain,” said Kfuri, founder of The Atlas Network, LLC, a US company which provides mass production, consulting and logistics services.

Mexico serves as a prime example of China’s active participat­ion in this near-shoring trend. With its proximity to the United States, it has attracted not only US companies but also Chinese ones.

A 2023 analysis by Holland & Knight revealed that 80 percent of the space leased by foreign companies in Mexican industrial parks is occupied by Chinese firms, compared to 15 percent rented by US-based companies.

Furthermor­e, the perception of China as solely a “low-cost, lowquality” manufactur­er is outdated. “This couldn’t be further from the truth as some of the most luxurious and prolific global brands have been producing their goods for decades in China,” said Kfuri.

Additional­ly, while geographic­al distance may seem like a hurdle, China’s production speed and scale often compensate, leading to faster product delivery despite the distance, Kfuri pointed out.

Faster solution

China’s production speed and manufactur­ing scale are five to 10 times (even greater in many scenarios) faster than anywhere else in the world, he explained, so shorter production windows yield a faster “product-in-hand” solution despite the geographic distance.

William Bratton, head of Asia-Pacific cash equity research at BNP Paribas, a leading bank in Europe, emphasized the “all-too-frequent” disconnect between rhetoric and reality when discussing China’s manufactur­ing capabiliti­es, while maintainin­g that analysis should be driven by numbers and data rather than anecdotes or perception­s.

What is “particular­ly remarkable” about China’s evolving trade structure, said Bratton in a recent blog post, is its capabiliti­es to expand exports in both low- and high-technology industries simultaneo­usly, whether it’s leather products or optical instrument­s.

The country’s rising share of global manufactur­ing exports also demonstrat­es that “Chinese manufactur­ers are, in fact, continuing to go from strength to strength”, he said.

A new study by the European think tank, the Centre for Economic Policy Research confirms China’s dominance in global manufactur­ing, with its production exceeding that of the nine next largest manufactur­ers combined.

Analyzing the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t’s recently released 2023 update of the TiVA database, the study found that in 2020, China accounted for a staggering 35 percent of global gross manufactur­ing production, followed by the US, Japan, Germany — China’s share is three times the US’ share, six times Japan’s, and nine times Germany’s.

The Trade in Value Added, or TiVA, database is a collection of measures that can provide insights into global production networks and supply chains.

Richard Baldwin, the study’s author, and professor of Internatio­nal Economics at IMD Business School in Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, urged caution against calls for decoupling from China, highlighti­ng the complex and interconne­cted nature of global supply chains, where all major manufactur­ers in the world rely on China for at least 2 percent of their industrial inputs.

“Politician­s who indulge in loose talk about decoupling from China need a clear-eyed look at the facts,” he said.

“Decoupling would be difficult, to say the least.”

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