(1) Asian economies | War Profiteering. China's regional [economic] rivals are seeking to benefit from the country's trade conflict with America. It will not be so simple.
Will China's rivals benefit from the trade war?
Integrated supply chains mean China cannot easily be replaced.
https://www.economist.com/financ ... -from-the-trade-war
Quote:
"Of the $2.5bn-worth of [plastic grocery or shopping] bags that America imports annually, roughly two-fifths come from China. In September these were among the 5,745 Chinese-made products that started facing American tariffs of 10%—high enough to tempt [American] retailers to look for suppliers elsewhere. [Vietnam wants more, much more.]
"Both those further up the value chain than china and those below it spy opportunities. [for the former:] Wealthier countries are eyeing some of the high-end manufacturing that they lost to China. Taiwan is trying to lure back computer companies, while Malaysia and Thailand want to expand their footholds in electronics.
" 'Factory Asia' -- the web of supply chains that is spread across the region, often centred around China [and obviously including China] -- accounts for nearly half of global manufacturing.
"The shift in factories away from China in fact predates the trade war. For the better part of a decade, soaring wages [in China] * * * university graduates in China now earn nearly as much as their Taiwanese counterparts.
"It [China] is the world's biggest exporter for good reasons. The country's dense clusters of companies offer everything manufacturers need: electronics in the south, automobiles in the east and heavy industry in the north. They are supported by top-notch roads and ports. As wages have risen, companies have poured money into automation. Moreover, China itself is a big market * * * All these advantages make China's factories more productive. Dan Krassenstein, director of Asian operations for Procon Pacific [based in Lombard, Illinois -- a village 16 air miles west of downtown Chicago], a manufacturer of heavy-duty bags for transporting fertiliser, sand and the like, says[:] * * * Workers in India earn 75% less than those in China. But because they are also less efficient, Mr Krassenstein estimates that his savings per bag in India are only around 35%. His company is shifting some production to India -- but only gradually.
"There is little precedent to help estimate the impact of trade war [because before Trump, a displeasure -- not even a threat -- was enough. Take US- Japan as an example. China is the only exporter nation that has the gall to fight]. Zhang Zhiwei 张智威 [北京对外经济贸易大学学士学位 and PhD from UC San Diego] of Deutsche Bank has used America's anti-dumping duties on China-made washing machines, imposed in 2017, as a case study. China's exports of washing machines to America collapsed, but those to other countries stayed strong. Meanwhile South Korean firms shifted production to Vietnam and Thailand, which let them [S Korean firms] expand their sales in America -- a decent outcome for Factory Asia. But then in January 2018 Mr Trump whacked tariffs on all imported washing machines. That finally led Asian makers to open factories in America. Machines there [in US] are now 15% more expensive.
Note: Surprise! About the last quotation on anti-dumping duties on large residential washing machines -- against dumping into US by South Korean firms (Samsung and LG), NOT Chinese firm; but Chinese firms have suffered 池鱼之殃.
(a) For an overview and the duties of 2018, see Section 201 Cases: Imported Large Residential Washing Machines and Imported Solar Cells and Modules. US Trade Representative,Jan 22, 2018 (under the heading "Fact Sheet;" publication date per Google)
https://ustr.gov/sites/default/f ... %20Fact%20Sheet.pdf
("On January 22, 2018, U.S. Trade Representative Robert Lighthizer announced that President Trump has approved recommendations * * * In 2011, Whirlpool filed a petition with the US Department of Commerce against Samsung's and LG's imports from factories in S Korea and Mexico; In 2013 Commerce issued antidumping (AD) duties (not specifying against what countries]. "Korean producers LG and Samsung, which make the vast majority of the washers imported into the United States, subsequently shifted production to China. In 2015, Whirlpool sought relief under trade remedy laws after washer imports from China sharply increased. In early 2017, Commerce issued an antidumping order on washers from China. This led to another shift in production, this time to Thailand and Vietnam. On June 5, 2017, at Whirlpool's request, the ITC [International Trade Commission, an independent federal agency; differing from Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) or US Dept of Commerce] initiated an investigation under Section 201 of the Trade Act of 1974 * * * In 2017, both Samsung and LG announced plans to build large factories in Newberry, South Carolina and Clarksville, Tennessee."
(b) "In early 2017, Commerce issued an antidumping order on washers from China."
Here is the details:
Commerce Finds Dumping of Imports of Large Residential Washers from the People's Republic of China. International Trade Administration [a division of Commerce], US Dept of Commerce, Dec 9, 2016
https://enforcement.trade.gov/do ... ad-final-120916.pdf
("On December 9, 2016, the Department of Commerce (Commerce) * * * found that the two mandatory respondents Nanjing LG-Panda Appliances Co., Ltd. (LG),
and Suzhou Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. and Suzhou Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd [were dumping] * * * The petitioner for this investigation is Whirlpool Corporation (MI) [based in Benton Charter Township, Michigan: 15-mile air distance west of Kalamazoo]. * * * Excluded from the scope are stacked washer-dryers and commercial washers")
That was Obama administration.
(c)
(i) Haier completed acquisition of GE Appliances on Aug 26, 2016. Haier's website does not publish data on market shares in US of any of its products. Besides there is no free information on its market share in US; to obtain one from market researchers in US one has to pay.
(ii) Kim Eun-jin, Despite US Tariff Bomb Samsung, LG Retain Top Spots in US Washing Machine Market. BusinessKorea, Oct 30, 2018.
www.businesskorea.co.kr/news/articleView.html?idxno=26126
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