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China Surpasses Japan as Asia's Top High-Tech Exporter, ADB Says

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  • China accounts for 43.7% of Asia's exports of high-tech goods
  • China also leads in exports of low-tech goods with 55.4% share
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China has brought to an end Japan’s dominance of Asia’s high-technology exports, according to the Asian Development Bank.

China’s share of Asia’s exports of high-tech goods such as medical instruments, and aircraft and telecommunications equipment rose to 43.7 percent in 2014 from 9.4 percent in 2000, the ADB said. Japan’s share slid to 7.7 percent last year from 25.5 percent in 2000. Southeast Asian nations including Malaysia and Philippines also lost market share.

The shift marks China’s success in boosting innovation and technology as key drivers of its economy as it seeks to move up the manufacturing value chain. Low-tech goods accounted for 28 percent of China’s exports in 2014, compared with 41 percent in 2000, according to ADB’s Asian Economic Integration Report 2015 released Tuesday.


"China has made inroads in taking more and more hi-tech manufacturing onshore even as a lot of critical components are still imported from other countries," said Frederic Neumann, co-head of Asian economic research at HSBC Holdings Plc in Hong Kong. "It’s becoming highly competitive, with highly skilled labor and we’re seeing increasing research and development moving into China."

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China-Made Drones
China-made drones, smart phones, and even high-speed trains have become internationally competitive and the number of enterprises in the high-tech manufacturing sector has tripled to almost 30,000 from less than 10,000 in 2000, Shang-Jin Wei, ADB chief economist, said in an e-mail.

“We are seeing some signs of success in some industries,” he said. “But China is still not a global technology leader like the United States or Germany. What we are seeing is that China is catching up very fast on the ’standard technology’ products and is beginning to do some innovations of its own.”

China also leads in exports of low-tech goods such as textiles, food and beverages, and wood, pulp and paper products. It had a 55.4 percent market share in 2014, followed by India with 9.4 percent.


Cross-border production networks -- trade in parts and components and final assembly -- have strengthened regional interdependence, as seen from increasing intraregional trade shares, the ADB said. Asia’s intraregional gross exports have increased about 3.6 times from 2000 to 2011, it said.

Economic Zones
Special economic zones can be a driving force for increased trade, investment, and economic reform in Asia at a time when the region is experiencing a slowdown in trade, provided the right business environments and policies are put in place, the ADB said. In developing Asia, countries with economic zones attract significantly more foreign direct investment, corresponding to 82 percent greater FDI levels, it said.

Separately, while the impending increase in U.S. interest rates could raise capital flow volatility, it is not expected to rattle the region’s markets as it did in 2013, the report said. Still, managing potentially volatile capital outflows remains an important issue for the region -- especially given rising risk premiums and depreciating currencies, it said.
China Surpasses Japan as Asia's Top High-Tech Exporter, ADB Says - Bloomberg Business
 
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Micron closing Puerto Rico operation, shifts work to China
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Credit: Kai Pfaffenbach/ REUTERS
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  • Semiconductor maker Micron Technology is closing a manufacturing facility in Puerto Rico and moving the work to China.


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    Around 185 jobs are affected by the closure, which is due to be completed by the end of this month, according to a U.S. government filing.

    This is not good news for Puerto Rico, which has an unemployment rate of more than 12% and is now struggling with a debt crisis. But it may be helpful for China; it's trying to increase its semiconductor manufacturing capability by investing in U.S. firms -- to the concern of some U.S. lawmakers.

    In 2003, Micron broke ground on a 48,000-square-foot "advanced technology DRAM module assembly" facility in Aguadilla, Puerto Rico. Micron already had more than 200 employees working at a temporary facility on the island.

    the firm wrote: "Due to economic pressures on the business the Micron Puerto Rico site will be closed on approximately Dec. 31, 2015. The module line operation and equipment will be transferred to Xian, China."

    Workers displaced by trade are eligible for TAA benefits, which include tuition assistance.

    Micron is the only U.S.-based DRAM maker, and has more than 30,000 employees globally. It has other manufacturing operations in the U.S. and overseas.

    When asked about the closing of the Puerto Rico manufacturing operation, a Micron spokesman, in an email statement, said that "due to market pressures on the business and as part of ongoing operational efficiency efforts, Micron has determined it is no longer feasible for the company to continue operating its module assembly test facility in Puerto Rico."

Micron closing Puerto Rico operation, shifts work to China | Computerworld
 
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Nihonjin will keep maintaining his denial mode as usual.

Let the anti-China goon squad go into denial mode. Won't change a damn thing.

I'm interested in Chinese power and importance in the world. Power is the one thing that matters in this world, not the opinion of a bunch of anti-China yahoos here and in the media.

Even in the SDR basket composition, Renminbi got a bigger marketshare than the Yen.

I've always said, Japan has a lead over China in a few areas such as the importance of the currency, the size of the bond market, robotics and semiconductor sector. China has buried Japan in pretty much all other areas that I've followed.

1st step: China has gone from no manufacturing to low-end manufacturing.
2nd step: Now its transforming from low-end manufacturing to high-end manufacturing.
Final step: Will be to indigenise the high-end manufacturing where its nearly all Chinese brands that dominate.

China will achieve that final step with Made in China 2025.
 
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China onshore HT (hi-tech) exports is far ahead of all countries, however note that Japan has massive offshore HT assets (Japan is the world's #1 largest creditor nation, Mainland China only #2) especially in ASEAN, North America. Comparatively speaking though some China offshore assets are HT (e.g. uranium production in Kazakhstan, Africa), in general most are MT or LT (e.g. garment, apparel), so the gap between China & Japan on HT exports is likely to be smaller from a stakeholder point of view.

The good trend is that China is changing fast on its onshore industrial structure as reflected in exports. Low value added, low tech, are fast decreasing. Heavy industry (e.g. electrical & mechanical equipment, energy equipment, infrastructure) is now the dominant sector.

bw15_magazine_econ_china.jpg


To maintain the lead in overall scale, and close the gap with Japan on per capita productivity, China should focus all resources on "Made in China 2025" as national priority:
  1. New information technology (this will involve core components, semiconductors)
  2. Robotics
  3. Aerospace and aeronautics
  4. Ocean engineering equipment and high-tech ships
  5. Railway equipment
  6. Energy saving and new energy transports/vehicles
  7. Power equipment
  8. New materials
  9. Biological medicine and medical devices
  10. Agricultural machinery
 
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@Nihonjin1051 still has not replied to this thread yet?
Update: omg, his profile page access is blocked.
Whenever they is bad news about Japan, he will just avoid. Last month we post news about Japan recession and invited him to thread to talk about it. He totally avoid and can still be active in other thread. :lol:
 
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Nor China have Tejas
Nor they have 3 AIrcraft Carriers
Nor they have Arjun Tank
Nor they have Nirbhay/Brahmos Cruise missiles
Nor they have AgniV/VI/XX
Nor have ignorance level like India.
Nor they have made a vedic spaceship 10,000 years ago


Then how come ADB claiming this bullsh!t? This is 100% Cheeni propaganda i tell you.
 
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Nor China have Tejas
Nor they have 3 AIrcraft Carriers
Nor they have Arjun Tank
Nor they have Nirbhay/Brahmos Cruise missiles
Nor they have AgniV/VI/XX
Nor have ignorance level like India.
Nor they have made a vedic spaceship 10,000 years ago


Then how come ADB claiming this bullsh!t? This is 100% Cheeni propaganda i tell you.
:lol: good one````you are going to invite loads Indian troll here
 
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:lol: good one````you are going to invite loads Indian troll here

Dont worry! We have great regards for China. Only thing, we just cant take Pakistani's being over enthusiastic on your achievements and criticizing India. What purpose does this serve for them may lie in the equation of "Higher than mountains and deeper than Ocean" Theory. Good luck and Congrats.
 
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@Nihonjin1051 still has not replied to this thread yet?
Update: omg, his profile page access is blocked.
That Nihonjin guy gets on my nerves.

His posts would have been appropriate 30 years ago. Japan was powerful back then and its decisions were important in Asia.

Today, Japan is in the intensive ward. I think it's like four recessions in five years.

Nihonjin's flood of posts to create the impression that Japan is an economic or military giant is completely inappropriate.

Japan is rapidly fading from the scene.

US: $18 trillion GDP
China: $11-12 trillion (depending on SNA 1993 or SNA 2008)
Japan: under $5 trillion

In a world with two giants, Japan is a relative pipsqueak. Furthermore, Japan is heavily in debt with a falling credit rating. On top of that, Japan is running persistent trade deficits. Finally, Japan's Yen is depreciating at a rapid rate (from 75 to 125 Yens per US dollar in the last three years).

Game over for Japan.
 
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Nihonjin will keep maintaining his denial mode as usual.
It's new normal that China rise and Japan down in every fields.Nihonjin should adapt it.
不过也许等下他就要发扶桑送几条船或几架飞机给安南或吕宋的消息补点血了,抱团取暖嘛,这个冬天有点冷~:enjoy:
 
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