China's Reserves Top Japan's as World's Largest
April 1st, 2006March 31 (Bloomberg) -- China overtook Japan as the world's largest holder of foreign-currency reserves last month, the latest evidence of China's rising influence as an international financial power.
The Chinese government's currency assets excluding gold rose to $853.7 billion as of Feb. 28, surpassing Japan's $831.6 billion, according to Bloomberg News calculations using government data. China's reserves, which now account for 20.1 percent of the world's total of $4.3 trillion, climbed a third during the past year. Japan's reserves account for 19.5 percent of the total.
A record trade surplus and a flood of foreign investment has pushed China's currency holdings higher, increasing pressure on the yuan to rise in value and prompting the government to encourage investment overseas and purchases of imports. The U.S., led by Treasury Secretary John Snow, is pressing China to let its currency move with market forces.
``One can think of the phrase `be careful what you wish for' if China revalues,'' said Robert Sinche, head of global currency strategy at Bank of America Corp. in New York. A strengthening of China's currency could affect ``import prices, inflation pressures in the U.S., and could make the Fed's job more difficult,'' Sinche said.
U.S. lawmakers are considering more than a dozen pieces of legislation that would place punitive tariffs on Chinese imports unless the yuan is allowed to strengthen. Lawmakers including Senator Charles Schumer, a New York Democrat, say China's undervalued currency hurts U.S. exports.
Yuan's Gains
Since the yuan, a unit of the renminbi, was revalued by 2.1 percent against the dollar on July 21, it has only gained about 1 percent. The yuan rose to the highest today since July's revaluation on speculation the market will have more influence on exchange rates after the foreign ministry yesterday said currency participants determine the value.
The yuan rose as high as 8.0173 against the dollar and was 8.0175 at the 3:30 p.m. close in Shanghai from 8.0264 yesterday, taking gains on the week to 0.16 percent, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Canada's central bank governor, David Dodge, said yesterday in Princeton, New Jersey, that China shouldn't be allowed to ``frustrate market forces'' by blocking movements in exchange rates.
$1 Trillion
Both China's government and central bank have said they will make the country's exchange rate system more flexible, while ruling out another revaluation. China's reserves may rise to $1 trillion by the end of this year, marking the first time any nation's reserves have reached that level, according to Stephen Green and Tai Hui, China economists for Standard Chartered Plc China economists.
China's trade surplus tripled to $102 billion last year, helping to drive economic growth of 9.9 percent, the fastest among the world's major economies. Schumer and South Carolina Republican Senator Lindsey Graham, after visiting China last week, postponed a vote on their China sanctions bill to give the country more time to change its currency system.
People's Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said in a speech March 20 that adjusting the yuan's value won't reduce the trade surplus. He said China will need two to three years to achieve balanced trade by increasing domestic consumption.
``The Chinese government has started expanding domestic market demand, lowered deposit rates, liberalized markets, allowed for exchange-rate fluctuations as part of our policy of improving the balance of international payments,'' Zhou said. ``The U.S. side must lower its fiscal deficit and boost savings.''
Direct Investment
China's reserves of foreign currency, which economists say are between 70 percent and 80 percent in dollars, rose by an average $17 billion a month in 2004 and 2005. That was also fueled by about $120 billion of foreign direct investment and billions of dollars of capital inflows betting on a rising yuan.
``We have to be somewhat careful about a radical revaluation'' of China's currency, said Mickey Kantor, a former U.S. trade representative under President Bill Clinton and now a partner at the law firm of Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw LLP. ``It could lead to more non-performing loans, which could make the banking system weaker. This is something we do not want to do.''
Kantor said U.S. should still be ``strong advocates'' for a revaluation of China's currency.
Treasury Holdings
China's holdings of foreign currency assets are now so large the country is shifting more of the added reserves into euros and yen to reduce its exposure to dollar-denominated assets.
China has been investing its reserves in U.S. bonds and assets. China held $262.6 billion in U.S. government Treasury bonds at the end of January, making it the largest investor after Japan. China's purchases of Treasuries have helped hold down market interest rates in the world's largest economy.
On March 5, Zhou said China won't reduce the size of its dollar holdings, though the central bank will ``adjust'' total reserves based on international market conditions.
In a separate report, the International Monetary Fund said today central banks cut their U.S. dollar reserves for the fifth straight year in 2005 and also pared their holdings of the euro and yen.
Central banks held 44.8 percent of their total foreign- exchange reserves in the U.S. currency at the end of the fourth quarter, compared with 46.8 percent in the same period of 2004, the Washington-based IMF said.
As recently as 2001 the world's central banks held over half of their reserves in dollars. The new figures validate speculation among investors that central banks are reducing holdings of dollars in favor of other currencies.
Detroit's Loss Is China, Slovakia's Gain as Auto Jobs Move East
March 31st, 2006March 3 (Bloomberg) -- General Motors Corp. pays Qiu Mingyuan $18 a day to build engines in Shanghai. Thousands of miles away in Oklahoma City, Adana Spain last week lost a job paying about 10 times more when GM closed a factory there.
Qiu and Spain are the face of an eastward shift in car production after automakers including DaimlerChrysler AG and Ford Motor Co. announced plans to cut 192,000 jobs in North America and western Europe over the past five years. As the companies display new models this week at the Geneva Motor Show, they are shifting jobs to countries such as Russia, China and Slovakia in pursuit of cheaper labor and sales in growing markets.
Last year, for the first time, automakers built more cars outside North America and western Europe than inside, according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers. The migration of jobs may not end for eight to 10 years, says Chris Benko, a car industry analyst for the consulting firm.
``They've been outsourcing our jobs for a very long time and it isn't just GM,'' says Spain, 59, who moved to Oklahoma in the early 1980s after GM closed the plant in Southgate, California, where her late husband worked. ``The American plants, as far as General Motors and them go, it's going to continue to buckle, and the foreign plants are going to grow and take over.''
While global auto sales will rise almost 19 percent in the next seven years, most of the increase will come from outside North America and western Europe, says Nigel Griffiths, a London-based analyst for Global Insight Inc. His firm projects sales will grow 5.5 percent in the two regions, compared with 36 percent in the rest of the world, including 20 percent in eastern Europe and 44 percent in Asia.
`Horrendously Painful'
``The dislocation is going to be horrendously painful,'' says Benko, who is based in Detroit. ``This industry has lived on borrowed time a long time and it needs to go through this readjustment.''
Factories in North America and western Europe produced 48.9 percent of the world's cars last year, down from 50.5 percent in 2004, Benko estimates. That share will drop to 44.7 percent in 2013, he forecasts.
Detroit-based GM plans to close nine factories and eliminate 30,000 hourly jobs in North America by 2008. Last week, it shut the plant in Oklahoma City where Spain and her colleagues built Chevy TrailBlazers and other sport-utility vehicles.
The company sold 26.2 percent of all new cars in the U.S. last year, down from 51 percent in 1962. That loss in market share has left GM with too many U.S. plants and too many workers.
Spain, whose husband died in 1999, says she didn't work for GM long enough to be eligible for full retirement benefits and will look for another job.
Toyota's Rise
Toyota Motor Corp., on pace to unseat GM as the world's largest automaker in the next few years, is increasing its market share in both the U.S. and Europe. Asian automakers captured a record 36.5 percent of the U.S. market last year. Their share of western Europe rose to 17.4 percent from 14.8 percent in 2000.
The stock of Toyota, based in central Japan's Toyota City, has risen 53 percent in the past 12 months, compared with a 16 percent gain in the 19-member Bloomberg World Auto Manufacturers Index. GM shares have dropped 44 percent in the same period.
Like GM, Dearborn, Michigan-based Ford is shedding workers in North America. Chief Executive Officer William Clay Ford Jr., 48, in January said the automaker would close 14 plants and eliminate as many as 30,000 jobs during the next six years. DaimlerChrysler's Chrysler unit cut 40,000 jobs in North America from 2000 to 2004 to end losses at that division.
In western Europe, carmakers such as Paris-based PSA Peugeot Citroen and Wolfsburg, Germany-based Volkswagen AG are offering early retirement and buyouts while opening factories further east.
Volkswagen, DaimlerChrysler
Volkswagen may eliminate as many as 20,000 positions in Germany in the next three years. Auto sales in western Europe declined 0.2 percent to 14.5 million vehicles last year and have yet to get back to the peak of 14.63 million sold in 1999.
DaimlerChrysler CEO Dieter Zetsche, 52, is spending about 3 billion euros to cut 14,500 jobs at corporate headquarters and the company's Mercedes division, mainly in Germany. At the same time, he plans to invest about 1.5 billion euros in China to make Mercedes and Chrysler models there.
GM and Ford have announced a combined 18,700 job cuts in Europe since 2003.
Volkswagen, Europe's biggest automaker, plans to hire workers for a new assembly plant in Russia that will produce 300,000 Skoda Octavia sedans a year, Volkswagen CEO Bernd Pischetsrieder, 58, said Jan. 8 during an interview at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
Peugeot Chief Executive Jean-Martin Folz, 59, says the move to the east will continue.
`Center of Gravity'
``The center of gravity of our sales is moving east, while the center of gravity of our production was far in the west,'' he said Feb. 8 in Paris, when the company released 2005 earnings.
Peugeot's western European deliveries dropped 2.1 percent last year to 2.36 million vehicles. Sales in the rest of the world, mainly eastern Europe, the Middle East, South America and China, rose 8.4 percent to 1.03 million vehicles.
The company's shift to the east is already changing the lives of its workers.
Barry Suddens, 59, took a buyout from Peugeot in May 2005 after working at its Ryton, England, plant for 20 years. He left with 55,000 pounds ($95,816) in hand and a pension of 917 pounds a month. Peugeot cut a total of 1,600 jobs at the Ryton plant in 2004 and 2005 through buyouts and early retirements, leaving about 2,000 workers at the factory.
Suddens says that since leaving Peugeot he has had 73 interviews for jobs ranging from stacking boxes at a warehouse to filling shelves at the local Tesco Plc supermarket, without an offer. He now volunteers to lead groups of schoolchildren on tours of his old factory.
``I planned to get another job,'' he says. ``I've totally given up now.''
Slovak Optimism
Peugeot spent 700 million euros to build its new factory in Trnava, Slovakia, which will employ 3,500 people. It plans to invest an additional 350 million euros to expand the plant's capacity in 2010, adding 1,800 more jobs. The carmaker had 40,000 applications for the first 3,500 positions.
In 2005, gross monthly wages in the Slovak manufacturing industry averaged $574 (18,088 koruna), compared with $3,259 in the U.K., according to the national statistics offices of the two countries.
Marek Mikus, 24, is four weeks into a five-week training course before he starts his job at the new Peugeot plant.
``I'm very happy I got this job,'' says Mikus, who previously worked as a security guard. ``Peugeot is a big, stable company, and conditions for work are better here than with someone else.''
Qiu, 28, says he has been working in the engine department at GM's factory in Shanghai for two years and earns about 3,500 yuan ($434) a month. The average hourly wage for a unionized assembly-line worker at GM plants in the U.S. was $26.35 at the end of last year, according to the United Auto Workers Web site. That's about $4,200 a month.
No Complaints
Qiu says he's satisfied with his pay. ``There's nothing to complain about,'' he says.
It's not just the low wages that make emerging markets attractive. Factory jobs follow sales growth, says Global Insight's Griffiths.
``I don't hate those people for those jobs moving over there,'' says former GM employee Spain. ``Those people are going to scramble for those jobs. I don't blame them. But I walk through the plant, and it just about rips my heart out.''
Large auto-parts firms faring badly vs. China
March 31st, 2006By Bob Fernandez
Inquirer Staff Writer
Some auto-parts companies have it worse than Cardone Industries Inc.
Delphi Corp., the giant parts maker spun off from General Motors Corp., is in bankruptcy protection, and on Wednesday announced a massive employee buyout plan. Another big one, Dana Corp., filed for bankruptcy protection March 3.
Cardone's biggest competitor, American Remanufacturers Inc. of Anaheim, Calif., was liquidated last November, putting its 1,650 employees out of work.
Cardone picked up some of its former competitor's business, at least for now. George Zauflik, a Cardone Industries vice president, says his company has hired 225 workers in Philadelphia since November as former orders from American Remanufacturers, the nation's No. 2 auto rebuilder, flowed to Cardone plants.
But automotive retail chains that used to buy rebuilt parts from the California company also started buying new parts from Chinese manufacturers, Zauflik says.
Cardone still has the advantage of quick delivery to U.S. retailers. But Zauflik said he fears that advantage could disappear if Chinese companies build and stock warehouses in the United States.
In bankruptcy court documents, American Remanufacturers cited debt, pricing pressures, raw material costs, and foreign competition for its woes. The company had plants in New Hampshire, Ohio, Arizona and California.
Herbert Ottman, 55, had a job in one of them. The machine operator showed up for his shift before dawn on Nov. 17 in Bedford, N.H., to find that security guards had locked the plant gates. Five-hundred-sixty workers in Bedford and in a sister plant in Merrimack, N.H., had no jobs. The two plants were operated as Car Component Technologies, a division of American Remanufacturers.
"I'm going to have to start a new career, for whatever time I have left," Ottman said. He's applied for 70 to 80 manufacturing positions in a widening circle around his home. "It hasn't been an easy road the last couple of months."
Foreign professionals in great demand (China)
March 31st, 2006GUANGZHOU: There will be greater demand for foreign professionals in fields such as manufacturing, English teaching and overseas marketing in Guangzhou, the capital of South China's Guangdong Province, in coming years.
Robust economic growth, efforts to improve the city's international appeal and the staging of the 2010 Asian Games in Guangzhou have all contributed to the internationalization of the city, according to Chen Like, director of Guangzhou Municipal Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs.
With the municipal government projecting an average 12 per cent annual economic growth, and industrial output set to double over the next five years, demand for related foreign professionals is set to grow.
The city has identified several key industrial growth sectors automotive, shipbuilding, petroleum, chemicals, and iron and steel in which foreign input may be needed.
Foreign-funded companies are planning to boost numbers of expatriates in their Guangzhou operations, while State-owned and local privately owned firms are also seeking foreign professionals to enhance their corporate management and overseas marketing capabilities, said Peng Wei, deputy director of the administration.
A local State-owned firm that hired foreigners for quality control and sales has, for example, successfully gained a significant share of the US market.
At the same time, Guangzhou's schools are crying out for more foreign English teachers to improve spoken English as the language becomes more important in the workplace and in the lead-up to the Asian Games.
According to Peng, foreign professionals made around 30,000 trips to Guangzhou each year.
They are engaged in the business, technical, educational, cultural and sports sectors.
The municipal government has also announced that Guangzhou will draw around 10,000 overseas Chinese scholars over the next five years.
The contribution made by foreign professionals is well recognized, Chen said.
For example, a reception was held last week in honour of Maureen Patricia Stratford, who's been working in Guangzhou for 10 years.
Stratford is an expert educator of children suffering Down's syndrome; she relocated to Guangzhou from Nottingham in the United Kingdom 10 years ago with her late husband after they retired.
"I just did what I can do Guangzhou is a wonderful city and I enjoyed the life here," Stratford said at the reception held by the club for Down's syndrome children she helped to establish.
Down's syndrome is a congenital disorder with clinical attributes such as moderate to severe mental retardation, a broad short skull, broad hands and short fingers.
"We appreciate her help to our family. I hope that more foreign experts like her could come to work in China," said Huang Haiying, a mother of a 15-year-old boy with Down's syndrome.
Guangzhou Municipal Administration of Foreign Experts Affairs said there's no problem finding foreign professionals; but with limited resources, establishing a database of potential candidates is difficult.
Headhunting firms that set up deals to bring out foreign professionals make low profit margins at the moment, given the relatively small volume.
In order to attract foreign professionals, businesses will have to strike a balance between turning a profit with the assistance of overseas workers and how much they can afford to pay them.
According to Chen, schools will need to distinguish between qualified English teachers and English speakers.
Source: China Daily
http://english.people.com.cn/200603/30/eng20060330_254606.html
Tips for selecting right international schools in China
March 29th, 2006by tnmom - from ShanghaiExpat Forum
Here are some things I would ask:
1. Class size? Subjects offered?
2. Language program - Opportunities to learn Mandarin, How much cultural emphasis in the curriculum?
3. Compatibility with home country curriculum - not a problem if this is a pemanant move, but if you will be moving back to Australia you want to make sure that your kids will be able to slip back into the curriculum as well as possible (or you may decide that the cultural experience is worth a little give and take academically)
4. Extra curricular activities - do they have what you want or will you have to search outside of school?
5. College recruitment program - for older grades - where do their graduates go to college? Who recruits at the school? What is the reputation? Do they offer appropriate college tests? Counseling for college application process?
6. Drug testing policy, uniform policy, etc. - nice to know up front.
7. Be sure to ask what the acceptance process is like - we were surprised to end up on the waiting list at SAS because we thought we had a seat guarantee from our company. It all worked out, but we moved here not knowing exactly where our younger two kids were going to school.
Behind The Chinese Networking (GuanXi) Buzz
March 29th, 2006By Michael Connolly
Shanghai is abuzz with the murmur of networking. Every week in Shanghai, countless events are held for ambitious fortune seekers relentlessly practicing the art of handshaking, exchanging mingpian, and of course, building guanxi or "relationships." Many residents in Shanghai will testify that attending networking mixers is a great way to expand contacts, establish face-to-face exposure, and in general, meet some interesting people.
Social networking gatherings are still primarily a Western concept. In China one builds guanxi through introductions by family and friends, or by doing favors. The idea of holding public meetings for the purpose of making new connections and expanding relationships is still relatively new in China, but in today's dynamic business climate it has become essential to have a multitude of connections, while still managing them effectively.
Networking is nothing new, of course. Every salesperson knows that they need to develop a base of contacts, and every businessman in China understands that he needs guanxi. In China, everything of consequence gets done through a person's guanxi. The difference between Western-style social networking and Chinese-style guanxi has to do with the specific rules governing interaction in the social network. At some point, for a Western businessperson trying to reach a local Chinese business prospect, a cultural threshold must be crossed. Western business rules that dictate how to do things must eventually yield to the mysterious rule of Chinese guanxi. Still, the "Six Degrees" concept applies. The person seeking contact probably knows someone, who knows someone, who knows someone (and so on), who knows the prospect. This is a core concept in both Chinese guanxi-building, as well as in the Six Degees of Separation (or Small World) Theory.
Science is proving what we already know
In his seminal work, American sociologist Stanley Milgram advanced and empirically tested the theory of "six degrees of separation," which states that any randomly selected pair of perfect strangers could be associated through no more than six common acquaintances. In one of his tests, Milgram successfully built associations between test participants in two different cities and two other participants living in Boston. The procedure was done by asking the first participants to mail a brochure to the Bostonians, using no more information than a common set of acquaintances. Columbia University began to test the six degrees of separation theory in 2002 on the Internet. Initial findings suggest that the "will" to communication outweighs the "means" of communication.
The Steps to Developing Good Guanxi
So what does one do with the pile of business cards collected at these networking events? First, it is important to realize that each connection can have hidden value, so it is prudent to look at more than the immediate needs and instead to treat each contact as potentially valuable in your personal six degrees network. While the person may not look, at first impression, like a particularly appropriate business contact, the act of just following up might make enough of an impression to open the door to further opportunities. Collecting business cards and shaking hands is only the first step. At some point, each connection has to develop some level of substance.
The next step is to simply follow up. If a person is serious about strengthening connections from the first handshake and business card introduction, then they have to be organized in a systematic way. Making the new contact a part of one's social network is next. The savviest network builders may automate the tracking and maintenance of his/her addresses through an online tool, but such thoroughness requires the discipline to get the information from the collected business card into the software.
Is Guanxi about Quantity or Quality?
A management consultant and author, Patricia Durovy, has stated that success in business is directly related to the QUANTITY of communication that is sent out. Once a connection is made, each person needs to manage communications with the people in his or her network so that connections become stronger and continue to develop. It may require a bit more work, but with the technology tools available, having a good six degrees network is not difficult and will pay for the effort by making it easier to get things done.