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EU spells out trade threat from China
Telegraph ^

Posted on 11/29/2004 6:56:37 PM PST by Happy2BMe

EU spells out trade threat from China
By Ambrose Evans-Pritchard in Brussels (Filed: 30/11/2004)

China's lightning advance into the production of cars, computers and high-tech industry poses a serious threat to Europe's economic base, according to a report by the European Commission.

Guenther Verheugen, the new enterprise and industry commissioner, said the EU must improve to avoid quick relegation down the world's economic league as Asia storms ahead on every front.

 
Guenther Verheugen
Guenther Verheugen

Once despised as low-cost producer of shoddy textiles and toys, China is now starting to match western technology, but at a far lower cost.

"China's active industrial policy is turning the country into a low-cost competitor in high-skill industries," said the EU's Competitiveness Report 2004.

"The growth of Chinese brand-name producers exploiting these advantages will become a major challenge to established multinationals and brand owners affecting to a large extent well-positioned EU-15 companies," the report said.

One of the most vulnerable targets is the German car industry, which is already in dire straits.

Illustrating the sharp deterioration, the EU's trade surplus with China has gone from surplus in 1995 to a €10,373billion deficit in 2002. China is now Europe's second biggest trade partner after the US.

The deficit is expected to be much higher in 2004 as the euro reaches historic highs against the Chinese yuan. The yuan is pegged artifically to the dollar. The effect is to give Chinese exporters a massive competitive boost against European firms, a situation that is unlikely to be tolerated much longer as economic growth stalls in the Germany and Italy.

The Commission blamed much of Europe's sluggish performance on suffocating red tape. It said the EU could raise overall GDP by 12pc through adopting an American-style "regulatory burden". So far, the East Europeans have also been hit hardest by China, as they tend to compete in the same sectors. The Hungarian electronics industry has lost market share steadily to Asian importers.

The 354-page report, mostly devoted to warning about the growing Asian threat, contends that China has harnessed all its energies on conquering high-tech markets, creating "national champions" - with protected home markets and cheap labour - designed to punch at global level.

"China's industrial policy has selectively attracted foreign direct investment in technology intensive industries in order to benefit from foreign technology and organisational know-how," said the report. Mr Verheugen said Europe needed to respond by spending far more money on research and development.

In a chapter on public sector employees, the report said Britain is acquiring a top-heavy structure with 18.8pc of the workforce now employed by the Government, compared with 11.1pc for Germany and 11pc for Holland. Only part of this is accounted for by the National Health Service.

Britain took 36pc of GDP in tax in 2002, compared with 40pc for Germany and 42pc for Italy.


TOPICS: Front Page News
KEYWORDS: china; economy; europeanunion; globalism; trade; unitednations; world
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To: Chu Gary
When you own nothing and everything is under price control, I guess you could live on nearly air officially.
Your quality of life is horrible, but not having anything, you wouldn't know it.

There is a lot of oppression there. A friend there in China saw some guy who stoled a purse from a tourist get his hands cut off last year.

Plus they are aborting daughters all over the place.
41 posted on 11/29/2004 8:04:08 PM PST by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: A CA Guy

" Plus they are aborting daughters all over the place."

Just wait until the Chicoms learn that they can be a cash crop to export to Saudi Arabia... in exchange for oil.


42 posted on 11/29/2004 8:21:24 PM PST by adam_az (Nov. 3, 2004: Our Republic is Secure!)
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To: Happy2BMe
China will dominate the high-tech industry in less than ten years at the current pace

and they can thank clintoooon for all his help in giving them the technology etc...in return for beaucoup campaign bucks - illegal, but okay if a dim

43 posted on 11/29/2004 8:23:58 PM PST by maine-iac7 ( Pray without doubt..."Ask and you SHALL receive")
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To: Happy2BMe
I think that the report is worth reading in the original; Mr. Pritchard-Evans' article is too short to do justice to the original report. The section on China starts on page 302 and goes through page 354. I found the writing style quite approachable.
44 posted on 11/29/2004 8:31:12 PM PST by snowsislander
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To: adam_az

You would think China has a load of oil under itself anyway.


45 posted on 11/29/2004 8:48:36 PM PST by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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To: Happy2BMe
The Commission blamed much of Europe's sluggish performance on suffocating red tape.

Funny how Red China is now less socialistic than the European Union. ;-)

46 posted on 11/29/2004 9:59:20 PM PST by Polybius
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To: Brilliant
I don't think outsourcing is as big a deal as it's made out to be.

Thats insane thinking. If I have a company of 50 workers making...well...anything from electronics to toys and I have to pay my workers salarys and insurance and taxes which comes up to...I dunno, lets say $700,000 /year.

But I can make these products in India or China for HALF the labor costs and provide NO insurance and benefits then WHY in gods name would I make the products here in this country or Europe?

47 posted on 11/29/2004 10:04:16 PM PST by stuck_in_new_orleans
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To: stuck_in_new_orleans

Yes, there is no reason you'd pay your workers more to make toys here instead of having them made in China. So what? There are certain things that we can make in this country, but which we can buy more cheaply overseas. We don't need to make those toys here, and those workers are better utilized producing something else that we can't buy more cheaply from China, like heavy equipment, airplanes or tall buildings.


48 posted on 11/30/2004 3:35:25 AM PST by Brilliant
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To: Happy2BMe

Europe is in trouble. The fall of the dollar and the yuan, is going to be their down fall. Currently their economies have stopped growing, their products are overpriced and the quality of their products are crap.


49 posted on 11/30/2004 1:35:01 PM PST by JeffersonRepublic.com
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To: Happy2BMe
"Red flags going up all over it seems."

Yep - with little gold stars....

50 posted on 11/30/2004 1:38:20 PM PST by azhenfud ("He who is always looking up seldom finds others' lost change...")
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To: azhenfud; A. Pole; TexasCowboy; MeekOneGOP; devolve; PhilDragoo; B4Ranch; JeffersonRepublic.com; ...
Wal-Mart's China inventory to hit US$18b this year
  Posted by The Loan Arranger
On News/Activism 11/29/2004 11:23:23 PM PST · 55 replies · 458+ views


China Daily ^ | November 29, 2004 | Jiang Jingjing
The world's largest retailer, Wal-Mart Stores Inc, says its inventory of stock produced in China is expected to hit US$18 billion this year, keeping the annual growth rate of over 20 per cent consistent over two years. The trend is expected to continue, company officials revealed. "We expect our procurement stock from China to continue to grow at a similar rate in line with Wal-Mart's growth worldwide, if not faster," said Lee Scott, the president and CEO (chief executive officer) of Wal-Mart. An unnamed company official also stated the firm will extend its procurement base from South China's Pearl River...

51 posted on 11/30/2004 2:16:46 PM PST by Happy2BMe (It's not quite time to rest - John Kerry is still out there (and so is Hillary))
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To: Happy2BMe

""We expect our procurement stock from China to continue to grow at a similar rate in line with Wal-Mart's growth worldwide,"

Let them sell their cheap products overseas, not here.


52 posted on 11/30/2004 4:01:33 PM PST by shellshocked
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To: Happy2BMe
Wal-Marts Child Labor Violations

[snip]

Globalizing Poverty Through The World Trade Organization

 

  • Bangladesh, Beximco factory--Young women making Wal-mart shirts forced to work from 7:30 a.m. to 8:00 p.m., seven days a week, 87 hours a week

     

  • Paid 9 to 20 cents and hour for 80 hours--lunch break is unpaid. And paid less than one-third the legal overtime rate

     

  • No health care--No maternity leave

     

  • Wal-Mart and Beximco are violating Bangladeshi labor law which sets the workweek at 48 hours and limits overtime to 12 hours a week, while also requiring overtime pay at double the standard hourly rate

53 posted on 11/30/2004 4:05:31 PM PST by shellshocked
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To: shellshocked

Wal-Mart denies everything.


54 posted on 11/30/2004 4:07:41 PM PST by Happy2BMe (It's not quite time to rest - John Kerry is still out there (and so is Hillary))
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To: Happy2BMe

You are correct, and almost nobody knows or cares.


55 posted on 11/30/2004 4:58:36 PM PST by international american (Proudly posting without reading the article since 2003.)
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To: A CA Guy
When you can use slave wages to compete against regular wages, the regular paying jobs lose

In the particular case of cars, they already were in critical condition. Several weeks ago there was a post about GM's Opel operation in Germany that wanted to shut down some plants and consolidate, in an attempt to regain profitability.

German "worker rights" laws blocked the consolidation, claiming some workers would lose jobs. They mandated that Opel keep the existing operation going, virtually guaranteeing additional losses; protecting worker's "rights" to a job, regardless of the actual economic consequences to Opel

Slave wages or not, Opel was in critical condition, terminally ill, but the Germans were only interested in the worker. This simply made it far more difficult to "compete" with a lower cost producer.

While they may be "slave wages" to you, but I'd bet the Chinese workers don't agree. Government regulations and worker's rights universally raise prices, so any economy that doesn't "overburden" corporations will win in the long run.

We, of all people should have figured that out by now. Expecting corporate altruism is unrealistic, because self-sacrifice becomes suicide if fully implemented.

It takes some very special circumstances for one to be willing to die for the sake of others, and business relationships fail to meet that qualification.

The requirement for one to make (unilateral) sacrifices for others, is anti-freedom, and is a special form of slavery.

That requirement went out of vogue with the Aztecs (ultimate altruism), and later during the Civil War (coerced altruism)

56 posted on 11/30/2004 5:01:54 PM PST by Socrates1 (Those whom the gods would destroy, they first make mad.)
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To: Happy2BMe

One of the reasons that Euros want to sell weapons to China. To balance the dificit.


57 posted on 11/30/2004 9:02:42 PM PST by however1
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To: Socrates1

I have lawyer friends who deal with car manufacturer CEOs by way of handling their estate planning. This year they are all saying the only car company that has been profitable was TOYOTA.
So, yep, I believe the Germany story and I know it is bad.


58 posted on 11/30/2004 9:13:40 PM PST by A CA Guy (God Bless America, God bless and keep safe our fighting men and women.)
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