Showing posts with label china trade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label china trade. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
US Jobs & Unemployment figures a Sham...Where are the jobs?
It’s funny how the media only shows you one face of the coin when their our political motivations involved...here is part of 'the Sham': July '2012 Job's Report was up 163,000 according to the Labor Department from the Obama administration; however, the Household Survey reported 150,000 people dropped out of the job market?! According to Ellen Zenter, Senior US Economist at Nomura, "This (latest jobs report) showing the economy expanded at a greater pace in July than in June, but households are still telling us they're in pain."
The 'Sham' is much worse than this, one can see our youth under-employed in many areas of the economy so our government reported 8.3% Unemployment figure is probably more like 12% if the under-employed, job market quitters, and structurally unemployed were added to the actual reported unemployment figures. I was eating dinner at a diner called "Norms" just last night in Southern California and overheard to youths strategizing on getting a waiter position at the restaurant...it sounded from their conversation like we were in the 'great depression' (which just might be...we are just in denial still based on fundamentals). Not that I am really pro Romney, but over the last four years Obama should have been busy creating sustainable jobs (not road jobs) to improve our infrastructure such as our failing electrical grid and aging aqueduct systems which could have led to a whole new generation of engineers and jobs for our economy.... Creating jobs take experience and work, ChinaMart USA is a platform that been attracting investment to the US and creating US jobs for years. I explain more in my book, "Book: Dancing with the Dragon" on working with China to help our economy if this is an interest to any of my readers.
Stephen Perl, CEO of 1st PMF Bancorp, a leading U.S. commercial lender specializing in providing loans to business for working capital and trade finance.
Friday, July 20, 2012
The Truth on the US-China Economic Relationship....
I have just read Mr. Stephen Roach, Academic CEO of Morgan Stanley and it hits a home-run
in bringing the quintessential issues of US-China relations to the table. It removes the economic smoke that our
government has painted for election purposes and logically drives home the
overwhelming need to focus on the market opportunities that exist in China for
the US. With China being the US’s third largest export market with US exports to China up 53% since 2007, I
think your point is made well on the importance “access to the China market”; however, on the same note, my book that I
published in February of this year, “Doing Business with China: Dancing withthe Dragon” focuses on the next logical issue…”How to Access the Chinese Market”.
One of my chapters, “Creating Your Own Access
to China” tells owners how to do this, but stresses that our real opportunities
in China cannot be achieved unless our Federal and local government start
working closely with business to create real long-term strategies to support
this effort. It’s funny…after all my
years of doing business with China, I see the Chinese government putting in
these supportive functions in their government to assist their businesses to
expand to the US (and other markets!) and their efforts have really worked…why
are we not doing this too in the US? (I see small glimmers of this but no real
strategy).
If Washington could just stop running for the next election
and pandering to every special interest group, and start being proactive and focusing
on implementing long term strategies instead of being so reactive...then we
could drive a whole new export market to create jobs and opportunities for the
US… my book goes into great detail on this matter as well. This article should be placed in the Wall
Street Journal for free… as it could serve as a real public service
announcement to wake our country up…Great article.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
Is China becoming too Expensive?
The answer is not simple...but it can be answered. We have to look at some
foundational information first to understand the full picture....
China has seen a paradigm shift from a 14.8% GDP annual growth in 2007 (and plus 10% growth annually for the previous 30 yrs) to 7.6% GDP annualized growth based on 2012 second quarter numbers. This is a 50% GDP drop in the last five years. China's GDP could be a lot higher based on all the infrastructural investment that is lined up...but it's not happening. This is all related to the cost of doing business in China...the expense.
China is and has been suffering for the last five years from massive shortage of labor. Simple economics tells us that when supply is limited, then demand and prices go up. Labor costs have risen more than 13% in just the last year. Boston Consulting states that the real wages in China will exceed that of Mexico this year most likely. Imagine if Mexico could get its act together and could start producing something else beside oil... they would have a terrific shipping, time and geographical advantage over China. It also appears that the US TV manufacturers in Detroit will also continue to enjoy an increasing advantage along with other new factories in the US due to the current economic environment (for a host of reasons); however, is China really getting more expensive in real dollars is the question? PMF Bancorp has had offices in China since 2004 providing factoring and finance to Chinese companies and their management has reported inflationary increases in the double digits for many business services as well as labor on a yearly basis.
I would argue that China is becoming more comparable in costs to many other developed countries, and therefore is getting more expensive in real terms. Its impossible for a country with an increasing quality of life such as China to maintain low wages. It is a benefit to the Chinese and to us in a way that China become gradually more expensive so each country can compete based on its true competitive advantage.
Therefore, imported products that are made in China have been and will continue to get more expensive naturally which has been the general economic prediction for a long time. This will mean our government's vendetta to appreciate the Chinese currency will disappear, and our government will have to find another reason to point to our poor economic situation (could it be the management?!). For now a stable China through higher wages is not a bad trade off for slightly higher prices at Walmart. Happy shopping.
China has seen a paradigm shift from a 14.8% GDP annual growth in 2007 (and plus 10% growth annually for the previous 30 yrs) to 7.6% GDP annualized growth based on 2012 second quarter numbers. This is a 50% GDP drop in the last five years. China's GDP could be a lot higher based on all the infrastructural investment that is lined up...but it's not happening. This is all related to the cost of doing business in China...the expense.
China is and has been suffering for the last five years from massive shortage of labor. Simple economics tells us that when supply is limited, then demand and prices go up. Labor costs have risen more than 13% in just the last year. Boston Consulting states that the real wages in China will exceed that of Mexico this year most likely. Imagine if Mexico could get its act together and could start producing something else beside oil... they would have a terrific shipping, time and geographical advantage over China. It also appears that the US TV manufacturers in Detroit will also continue to enjoy an increasing advantage along with other new factories in the US due to the current economic environment (for a host of reasons); however, is China really getting more expensive in real dollars is the question? PMF Bancorp has had offices in China since 2004 providing factoring and finance to Chinese companies and their management has reported inflationary increases in the double digits for many business services as well as labor on a yearly basis.
I would argue that China is becoming more comparable in costs to many other developed countries, and therefore is getting more expensive in real terms. Its impossible for a country with an increasing quality of life such as China to maintain low wages. It is a benefit to the Chinese and to us in a way that China become gradually more expensive so each country can compete based on its true competitive advantage.
Therefore, imported products that are made in China have been and will continue to get more expensive naturally which has been the general economic prediction for a long time. This will mean our government's vendetta to appreciate the Chinese currency will disappear, and our government will have to find another reason to point to our poor economic situation (could it be the management?!). For now a stable China through higher wages is not a bad trade off for slightly higher prices at Walmart. Happy shopping.
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