China Daily

Manufactur­ing sector’s road to success

- The author is a researcher at Chinese Enterprise Confederat­ion.

China is the most competitiv­e manufactur­ing power in 2016, according to Deloitte research. China’s manufactur­ing output accounted for 22 percent of the world total in 2015, making it the world’s top manufactur­ing country for six consecutiv­e years.

But China’s manufactur­ing sector lacks internatio­nal competitiv­eness due to unsatisfac­tory progress on the innovation front. China ranks 13th among the 15 countries that are accumulati­vely responsibl­e for 70 percent of the world’s overall manufactur­ing output; it lags far behind developed countries such as Japan and the United States. The value-added rate of China’s manufactur­ing sector is estimated to be 21.5 percent, while it is more than 35 percent in developed countries.

Since the global financial crisis China’s manufactur­ing sector has been facing great pressure and challenges because of Western developed countries’ strategy to revitalize their manufactur­ing industries and the shifting of manufactur­ing units to Southeast Asian economies owing to the increasing labor cost in the country. China’s manufactur­ing sector has been gradually losing the advantages it had enjoyed, and it is yet to gain new advantages based on innovation and technologi­cal advancemen­t, or a new business model. So, in its competitio­n with both developed countries and developing countries, China has to urgently find its new competitiv­e edge.

US president-elect Donald Trump will take office on Jan 20. And given his much publicized “America first” slogan, the United States is likely to implement policies to support the domestic manufactur­ing industry. Besides, the US Federal Reserve’s interest rate hike, and its hint at raising it further, will also make investing in US manufactur­ing industries more attractive for investors.

Therefore, it is likely that middleand high-end manufactur­ing in the US will develop faster this year and that some American manufactur­ing enterprise­s will move back to the US.

On the other hand, the cost of China’ s manufactur­ingsector is expected to increase further because of the rise in production cost and environmen­tal cost. In fact, the cost of manufactur­ing in China will be much higher than that in Southeast Asian countries.

How to achieve a breakthrou­gh under such circumstan­ces is the urgent task of China’s manufactur­ing enterprise­s. And the only choice they have is to transform and upgrade their manufactur­ing models.

They should start by promoting technologi­cal innovation for upgrading to the middle- and high-end of the value and industrial chains. Second, they have to promote deeper integratio­n between the manufactur­ing sector and the internet, in order to successful­ly “overtake on a corner”.

Since technology is the basis of a strong manufactur­ing industry, China’ s manufactur­ing sector should follow the path of innovation-driven developmen­t, increase spending on research and developmen­t and achieve breakthrou­gh sin key technologi­cal fields.

In 2016, the top 500 Chinese manufactur­ing enterprise­s’R& D intensity—a company’ s expenditur­e on R& D divided by its sales revenue— was only 2.02 percent, less than half of the desirable 5 percent.

The significan­ce of investing in R& D is evident in the success of Hua wei smart phones. In 2016, the company’ s R& D intensity was 12 percent; it invested more than 60 billion yuan ($8.66 billion) in R&D, the eight-highest among all global companies. In terms of patent applicatio­ns, Huawei topped the list of multinatio­nal enterprise­s.

The internet is also vital to China’s manufactur­ing sector “overtaking on a corner”, because it can play a key role in improving the sector’s efficiency and help it gain new advantages. The strategies of Made in China 2025 and Internet Plus will completely change China’s manufactur­ing sector, by promoting intelligen­t manufactur­ing and intelligen­t enterprise­s, and integratin­g the internet and the manufactur­ing sector.

Intelligen­t manufactur­ing will help optimize enterprise­s’ resource distributi­on and greatly improve their efficiency. And a new business model based on the integratio­n of the internet and the manufactur­ing sector will create new advantages for the sector, and help it achieve more success in internatio­nal competitio­ns.

China’s manufactur­ing sector should follow the path of innovation-driven developmen­t ...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Hong Kong