We'll see in a few years how things turns out.
You need not to wait a few years; just look at the history of HK and Taiwan to see the future of China. That's if China manages to get rid of the communist party and become democratic; if not, then the future is bleaker for China.
thats why most of hi-tech products (example; luxury cars, car engines, turbo engines, nano products, areospace materials and meg tone cargo ships`etc) are produced in western countries and China
Foreign brand luxury cars are built in China with imported parts to escape the 30% import tariff, they are not of Chinese engineering. The only thing the Chinese bring is the labor. I mean, you have BMW and Brilliance Zhonghua rolling down the same line at Brilliance's factory; BMW is a BMW, while Brilliance Zhongua is the second car that scored zero in EuroNCAP auto crash test.(The first one being Landwind of China). Pretty much the same story with everything else.
but not in other low cost countries you have listed`` and acutually China is No.1 exporter of hi-tech products out pace 2nd U.S by more than 30% margine``
Those are made by foreign corporations.
one thing you need to worry about is S.korean losing edge to China
And I was reading in November edition of Nikkei Trend how Japan Inc. has been defeated by Koreans. It's funny how your understanding of the world is exactly the opposite of the reality.
as the labour cost in china is much lower than S.korea
Irrelevant because Korean corporations learned how to cope with higher labor cost via efficiency. When you move up to high-value goods, labor cost becomes a small portion of your overall cost.
and technology readness are almost the same
You are not serious, are you?
some S.kreans claim Jesus is Korean``!
No, what's happening is that some cult leaders are claiming to be the reincarnation of Jesus. Those people are free to make such claims because Korea is a free country.
just on top of my head HTC leads the tablets in European market``but your Samsung isnt doing very well
Apple Info Center | iPad Still Dominates with 81% of Market
But Strategy Analytics said the iPad dominates every major region, particularly North America because its brand and distribution networks are best established here. Meanwhile, it said, "HTC's tablet strategy struggled to make an impact in Western Europe and elsewhere."
Once again, the reality is exactly the opposite of your little fantasy world.
and you are trying to convince others to believe your stupidity by using hair-cut and grocery shops? lol```even its true have you been counting how many foreigners shop in Korean (chinese) grocery shops and how many in Chinese grocery shops?
Well, just read.
Top 5 Grocery Store Openings of the Decade - Houston Restaurants and Dining - Eating Our Words
Super H Mart: Sure, other Asian-focused grocery stores existed before Korea-based chain Super H Mart opened in an old Kroger store on Blalock. Ko-Mart, just down the road, had filled the Korean grocery store niche for years, and countless grocery stores in Chinatown -- both old and new -- have offered Asian foods, ingredients and spices for decades. But when Super H Mart opened in 2008, it turned the Asian grocery store paradigm on its head. This wasn't a baffling, oddly scented, dimly lit store like our beloved Hong Kong Market. With a food court, a bakery, a phenomenal fish department, a wall of kimchi, a jewelry store, wide aisles, bright lighting and cheerful signage, it was a fascinating hybrid of American and Asian grocery stores. 99 Ranch Market, which opened this year in the old Fiesta Mart location also on Blalock, is another chain that's trying to emulate the Super H Mart model -- and by all accounts, it's succeeding so far.
The story is repeated across the US; tiny Chinatown supermarkets getting killed by Korean(Super H-mart, HanNam) and Taiwanese(99 Ranch) steamrolling everybody else.
Top 5 BGrocery Store opening of the decade in Houston, Texas.
H-E-B
Central Market
Mi Tienda
Super H Mart
Wal-mart
I am a Hong Konger myself, do you think you know more than me about my own city?
We always refer to ourselves as "中国人" (Chinese people). Check the demographics, 95% of the Hong Kong population is Han Chinese.
Sorry to prove you wrong.
BBC??? - ???? - ??14??????????
結果顯示,選擇「香港人」的為44%, 選擇「中國人」的為23%,「中國的香港人」和「香港的中國人」分別為21%和10%。
65% of people in Hong Kong identify themselves as Hong Kongese, not Chinese. Only the mainland immigrants like yourself all yourself Chinese.
the Chinese managers were compelled - terrified, really - into providing the highest-quality food available to their workers in the company cafeteria. If they did not, then the next day the workers would leave en masse to work in the factory across the street.
This is the secret sauce behind world-class corporations in Japan and Korea. Japanese and Korean corporations practice life-time employment and make heavy investment in training of those workers for a decade. This is only possible because the social norm discourages workers from moving between companies, and it is the heavy investment in human capital that turned these companies into world-class competitors.
On the other hand, there is no company loyalty among Chinese workers, who jump companies at the slightest offer of salary increase. Since Chinese corporations cannot trust their workers, they make no investment in their workers, and prefer to steal workers from other companies if necessary.
This is why the rise of Japanese/Korean style world-class corporation is impossible under Chinese culture. There were no world class corporations in Hong Kong and Taiwan, and there won't be in China.