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China's loss can be Southeast Asia's gain
The pandemic-induced disruption of global supply chains has accelerated the exodus of manufacturing from China. Other countries in Asia, particularly South Korea and Vietnam, stand to benefit from this trend, and should take steps to encourage relocation and reshoring
Keun Lee 11 Oct 2021

Covid-19 has exposed the myriad weaknesses of cross-border value chains. Once the backbone of globalization, now they are associated with vulnerability to disruption. Thanks to the pandemic, value chains are being reconfigured with a focus on resilience. At the same time, China’s changing role in the global economy is forcing companies to reconsider it as a manufacturing hub. The world’s factory has reinvented itself as the world’s investor. Increasing digitalization of production and ongoing trade tensions with the United States have also contributed to an exodus of companies from China.

The departures include firms from a wide range of countries and industries. US toymaker Hasbro closed its Chinese factory in favour of facilities in Vietnam; Japanese electronics giant Sony has transferred operations to Thailand; and South Korea’s Cotton Club is relocating production to the Philippines, Cambodia, and Indonesia. Even Chinese firms are leaving the country for less expensive destinations. Wage rates in China are more than double those in Vietnam and close to 70% of those in South Korea. Labour shortages also have made it difficult to keep manufacturing costs down.

Moreover, fierce competition in the Chinese market from local manufacturers has made the country less attractive as a production centre. A decade ago, Samsung’s Galaxy phone held more than 20% of the Chinese market; today, its market share is less than 0.5%. Given such trends, Samsung decided to relocate all of its manufacturing capacity for final consumer goods outside of China. The company currently maintains only three factories in China, and they make intermediate parts – semiconductor chips, batteries for electric cars, and multi-layer ceramic condensers that stabilize electricity flow in circuit boards.

South Korea in particular has taken steps to encourage its companies to bring production home. Over the past decade, the South Korean government has enacted a number of policies – including tax benefits, subsidies, and discounts on land – to encourage reshoring. In 2019, the country further modified its “U-turn act” to apply to a wider range of industries, including information- and knowledge-based companies. These policies, combined with external factors, have contributed to a steady rise in the number of South Korean companies that have reshored production – from nine in 2018 to 16 in 2019 and 21 in 2020. The returning firms represent a diverse group of industries – from electronics to jewelry to automobiles – and most of them are relocating from China.

The digitalization of production has been another factor driving the increase in reshoring. More companies are finding that it makes sense to build highly digitized “smart factories” in their home countries and close down old production lines in China. For example, the South Korean apparel firm G&G Enterprise built a new, fully automated smart factory in southwest Korea that enabled it to be price competitive and more flexible in product variety – even in the labour-intensive textile sector. For companies that face challenges with this digital transformation, the South Korean government has set up a special public-private collaborative vehicle to help businesses reshore and construct smart factories.

Increasing digitalization also seems to be an effective way to cope with the challenge of supply-chain disruptions. Hyundai Motors, for example, previously outsourced all of its production of wiring harnesses to suppliers in China, but COVID-19 shut down output of this simple but labour-intensive product. Thanks to South Korea’s digital transformation programme, Hyundai’s manufacturing of wiring harnesses is now being reshored.

For many countries in Southeast Asia, China’s loss is their gain. Thanks to the relocation and reshoring of manufacturing, the members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) recorded their highest-ever inflows of greenfield foreign direct investment in 2019. While the economic impact of the pandemic reduced those flows in 2020, interest in the region remains strong. Future economic growth in the Asean countries, and their ability to contribute to global value chains, depends on how successful they are at attracting firms that want to relocate or reshore, especially from China. Asean governments need to recognize and seize the opportunity.

Keun Lee is the vice-chair of the National Economic Advisory Council in Korea and a professor of economics at Seoul National University.

Copyright: Project Syndicate

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