Manufacturers look back to SE Asia, but not to Cambodia



After rush to China, manufacturers look back to Southeast Asia
By Wayne Arnold The New York Times

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 2006

SINGAPORE From automobiles to semiconductors, China is fast catching up
with the rest of the world in manufacturing prowess, making it a
formidable competitor for exporters everywhere. But does its rise
necessarily spell doom for Southeast Asia's big manufacturing centers?

Not according to Teh Hok Peng, a manager at the factory in Penang,
Malaysia, of BenQ, a Taiwan electronics maker.

Four years ago, as high-tech factory jobs in Malaysia were shifting to
China and obituaries were being written for Southeast Asia's
electronics industry, Teh went with the trend: He packed up his wife
and two small children and moved to Suzhou, China, to manage BenQ's
factory there as it began shifting production out of Penang.

Since then, however, Southeast Asia's big economies have proved the
doomsayers wrong. Instead of shutting their factories and relying on
raw material exports, as many pessimists predicted, the more prosperous
countries - Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand and the
Philippines - have generated a trade surplus of about $20 billion with
China in 2004, supplying it with sophisticated electronic components.
For the first eight months of 2005, the surplus was $13.6 billion.

In contrast, the United States trade deficit with China was $201.6
billion in 2005, while the European Union's was $70 billion.

Today, Teh is back in Penang, convinced that, while China may be
closing the technological gap, it still has a long way to go to unseat
Southeast Asia as a base for electronics exporters.

"China remains attractive thanks to the size of its market," he said,
"but the multinationals will never leave here completely."

While Southeast Asia seems to have staved off the worst, a debate has
arisen in the region: Can China's southern neighbors remain strong
exporters feeding its appetite for components, or will China inexorably
draw those industries inside its own borders?

Trade figures indicate that China is fast gaining self-sufficiency in
electronics parts, and that Southeast Asia's trade surplus may have
peaked. Yet Southeast Asia's factories are still humming, suggesting
that two electronics centers are emerging, somewhat interdependent, but
rivals all the same.

"People are suddenly saying, 'We shouldn't be expanding in China at the
exclusion of everything else,'" said Dharmo Soejanto, an analyst at Kim
Eng Securities in Singapore. "They're taking a more balanced view of
the world. China is not going to manufacture everything."

In particular, manufacturers have found unexpected obstacles in China.
Rampant technology piracy, resurgent nationalism, and - surprisingly in
a country of 1.3 billion people - a dire shortage of high-skilled
labor, are raising costs in China so fast that many manufacturers are
looking back to Southeast Asia.

Even as foreign investment continued to flood into China last year,
anecdotal evidence suggested the pendulum might be swinging slightly to
the south: Intel has applied to build a $605 million semiconductor
factory in Vietnam. Germany's Infineon Technologies is building a $1
billion chip plant near Penang and the Japanese company Matsushita
Electric Industrial is planning a plant in Singapore to assemble
plasma- display televisions.

Others, however, believe China will prove a magnet, with its knockout
combination of a huge market and low salaries.

"It's just a reality of the business model," said Mario Morales, an
electronics supply chain analyst at the market research firm IDC in San
Mateo, California. "People are outsourcing a lot more, and China has
established a pretty good infrastructure."

That would be consistent with the trend of the past few years. The
flood of investment into China since its entry to the World Trade
Organization in 2001 has come largely at Southeast Asia's expense.
Foreign direct investment into Southeast Asia has fallen by one-third
since 1996. In 2004, Japan invested twice as much in China as it did in
Southeast Asia.

The impact was dramatic: The Malaysian government estimates that almost
15 percent of Penang's manufacturing jobs were lost between 2001 and
2003. By 2002, pessimists were talking about a "huge sucking sound" of
investment halting Southeast Asia's industrialization.

But then something different happened: Southeast Asia experienced a
boom in exports of electronics components to its supposed nemesis.

In 2003, Southeast Asia's exports to China rose by more than 50
percent, led by a 67 percent jump in electronics shipments. Many
government officials and industry experts heralded this development as
evidence that Southeast Asia was "climbing the high-tech ladder" ahead
of China. But it wasn't long before Southeast Asia's component
manufacturers started heading north too.

"The contract manufacturers, the component manufacturers, the guys that
build the boards and the parts, followed their customers along to
China," Soejanto at Kim Eng Securities said.

This migration has created what some economists say is a worrying
trend: shipments of electronic components to China are growing more
slowly than China's own exports of electronic goods. Economists say
that means manufacturers in China are buying more components at home.
While some economists say the slowdown in components exports is a
temporary product of China's efforts to slow its economy, others say it
portends the long, inevitable decline predicted five years ago.

As for Southeast Asia's hope of climbing the high-tech ladder, China
may have an edge there, too. China's companies outspend most Southeast
Asia companies on R&D. And Beijing's carrot-and-stick approach to
investment ensures companies hold back only their very latest
technology.

"China can encourage investment and penalize those who don't import
technology," said Xavier Chong, chief executive of the Singapore
company Ellipsiz, which services semiconductor makers.

While Southeast Asia has failed to create a single major international
brand, China is following in the footsteps of Japan and South Korea
with brand electronics exporters of its own - TCL in televisions and
Haier in home appliances.

The outlook is not entirely negative for Southeast Asia, though.
China's rise has hastened efforts by the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations to lower tariffs and other barriers to create a common market
of its own 544 million consumers.

But a bigger factor in Southeast Asia's nascent revival are the
disadvantages manufacturers face in China. China suffers power
shortages, for example, while Singapore's top-notch infrastructure
continues to draw investment: 3M, ASML, Hewlett-Packard and IBM are
just a few of the big names that have announced plans to build new
factories in the island-state.

Anti-Japanese riots last year convinced many Japanese companies,
analysts say, that they need to offset their China risk with a presence
in Southeast Asia. Some manufacturers have even begun to require that
their suppliers in China have sources of supply outside, said Heng Huck
Lee, Globetronics' executive director.

Weak intellectual-property protections are another problem, and many
companies fear that competitors will steal their best product designs.

But the most common frustration foreign investors face in China - and
one of the biggest surprises - is the spiraling cost of increasingly
scarce skilled labor, which on China's eastern seaboard can roughly
approximate salaries in some of its Southeast Asian rivals. Indeed,
executives say hiring an engineer in Guangdong already costs more than
hiring one in Malaysia. The result, they say, is rampant job-hopping
among Chinese highly skilled and factory floor workers.

At BenQ's factory in Suzhou, Teh said, four of every five employees
were poached each year. Engineers are so highly prized that BenQ has to
offer them interest-free housing loans.

"I don't see a compelling reason to build there," said Chong at
Ellipsiz. When Ellipsiz decided to build its own chip equipment plant
in 2004, it chose Vietnam

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