by winston » Thu Jun 26, 2008 11:47 pm
Hong Kong Companies May Shut 20,000 China Plants as Costs Rise
By Mark Lee and Kevin Hamlin
June 26 (Bloomberg) -- Hong Kong companies may shut 20,000 factories in the neighboring Chinese province of Guangdong this year due to increased costs from higher fuel prices and wages, an industry association said.
``At the end of this year, maybe only 50,000 Hong Kong- owned businesses will remain,'' of about 70,000 in the province, according to Danny Lau, chairman of Hong Kong Small and Medium Enterprises Association.
``The increase in fuel costs comes on top of several other major issues firms have been grappling with recently,'' such as rising employee expenses related to a new labor law and the appreciation of the yuan.
China last week raised gasoline and diesel prices at least 17 percent, the second increase in seven months, after global crude-oil prices surged to records. The government this year imposed a labor contract law mandating minimum wages and severance payments. The yuan gained 4 percent against the dollar in the first quarter, cutting demand for Chinese-made goods in overseas markets.
Employee costs have jumped 30 percent this year at Kam Pin Industrial (HK) Ltd., Lau's company. The maker of building materials, which employs 300 workers in China, has also seen an almost doubling in fuel costs this year, Lau said.
Higher employee costs in Guangdong prompted Foxconn International Holdings Ltd., based in Shenzhen, to set up production sites in lower-cost Hebei and Shanxi provinces in northern China, Samuel Chin, chairman of the world's biggest contract maker of mobile-phones, said last week.
Single-digit Growth
``China's export competitiveness is definitely declining fast,'' said Sun Mingchun, an economist with Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in Hong Kong. The volume of goods and services sold overseas has declined to ``single-digit'' growth, he said.
Profitability of Hong Kong-owned manufacturers was also hurt by lower export rebates from the Chinese government, the association's Lau said. Last year, China cut rebates on overseas sales of products including textiles, toys and steel products as part of efforts to lower energy consumption and ease trade friction with the U.S. and Europe.
About 10,000 Hong Kong-owned factories in southern China may shut or cut operations, Stanley Lau, vice-chairman of the Federation of Hong Kong Industries, said last month.
Hong Kong companies invested $280 billion in China between 1978 and 2006, accounting for more than 39 percent of the country's foreign direct investment during the period, according to data from the Ministry of Commerce.
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"