China Makes Stunning Recovery in Export, Factories
Scramble for Workers
China’s manufacturing recovery, fuelled
in part by demand from COVID-constrained consumers abroad, has soared past
expectations this year, so much so that factories are now struggling to fill a
shortage of blue-collar workers to clear mounting orders.
The country’s output of industrial robots, computer equipment, and
integrated circuits has roared back from its coronavirus paralysis - production
for the year to November is up 22.2%, 10.1% and 15.9%, respectively.
Much of the manufacturing boom has come from foreign demand, with
export growth topping expectations for eight of the last nine months.
The remarkable turnaround comes as China has mostly eradicated the
virus and contrasts with the sluggish comebacks seen in major industrialised peers, where factories are still struggling
with pandemic disruptions and the hit to demand.
China’s global export share increased to over 13% in the second
and third quarters from 11% last year, according to Nomura, the highest for any
quarter since at least 2006 when the investment bank started compiling the
data.
While emergency stimulus in the United States and Europe pumped
money into consumers’ wallets, the fight to contain the virus in those markets
fired up demand both for China-made PPE goods and gadgets for westerners stuck
at home.
Government data shows that in November there were more people
employed in the industrial sector in Jinhua city, which includes the eastern
export hub of Yiwu, than there had been at any time
since end-2017.
"We laid off about 50 workers in the first half, and now with
orders soaring, we`re short of staff and not able to further ramp up
production," said Deng Jinling, who owns a
thermal flask factory in Yiwu, selling to the Middle
East, United States and Europe.
Some workers she laid off have found jobs back home and are not
willing to travel back just a few months before the upcoming Lunar New Year
holidays in February.
But with clients chasing her heels, Deng bought two automated
production lines at the end of November to boost efficiency.
A private index by Renmin University
tracking demand for blue-collar labour hit a record
in the third quarter. Some factory managers have hiked wages by 25% to 10,000
yuan ($1,530) per month, well above the average starting wage for graduates,
according to local media.
Best Year
For China`s bicycle industry, 2020 is the best year in a decade,
with consumers abroad craving exercise and ways to avoid public transport, said
Liang Xiaoling, general manager at
Guangzhou-headquartered Trinx Bikes.
"Our capacity maxed out in September and October, and we
hired a lot of temporary workers to catch up with the demand," said Liang,
adding that orders are now stretching into 2022.
His factories now employ about 100 extra temporary workers on top
of 1,000 or so regular staff.
Although manufacturing investment was slow to recover, falling
3.5% over the first 11 months, strong export demand helped it rebound in the
last quarter.
Investment jumped 12.5% year-on-year in November, up from 3.7% in
October, according to research from analysts at CICC, an investment bank.
Zhang Qinming, who owns a company
manufacturing speakers for European and American markets, says demand is 25%
higher than in previous years.
He`s been paying his normal staff overtime to keep up and has also
hired temporary workers for about 18-19 yuan an hour, 20% more than his
full-time workers. As a last resort, he`s leased other factories to take the
load.
Limited Opportunity
A labour crunch isn’t the only
constraint.
China’s lopsided trade balance - exporting three containers for
every one imported recently - and delays in containers returning to China due
to the pandemic overseas, have created severe shipping bottlenecks, now
starting to pinch exports.
The yuan is also hovering near multi-year peaks against the
dollar, pressuring profits further. And an official gauge of factory raw
materials costs reached the highest level since 2017 in November.
But for policymakers, the export boom has been a welcome one in a
tough year. The surprising resilience of China’s export sector, which employs
around 180 million people, has reduced the need for massive stimulus to revive
the economy this year, said analysts.
China hit 122% of its annual job creation target by end-November.
But manufacturers don’t expect this boom to last as other
economies ramp up production.
($1 = 6.5372 Chinese yuan)