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This Chinese town shows the success of China's supply chain and failures of Indian manufacturing

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Yiwu, a small town in China's Zhejiang province, exports several hundred million dollars’ worth of artificial jewellery to India and the world every year among other products
by Ananth Krishnan
This Chinese town shows the success of China's supply chain and failures of Indian manufacturing
A small town in China's Zhejiang province, Yiwu presents a snapshot of what China’s manufacturing did right. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

(ATF) Yiwu is a gritty town, where businesses appear to rise and fall every other week. Deals are struck with the shake of a hand. Contracts can mean nothing. The city was in the news for the wrong reasons in 2012 when two Indians, Deepak Raheja and Shyamsunder Agarwal, were held hostage by locals after their company allegedly defaulted on payments of 10 million yuan ($1.5 million).



These cases make the news, but they are outliers. You only need to see the steady stream of incoming businessmen (and they are mostly men) to see that the Yiwu model works.

There are traders from every corner of India patrolling the dimly lit corridors of the market, looking for bargains. One afternoon, I spotted a trader from Rajasthan procuring cartons of "authentic" Rajasthani jewellery from a Chinese entrepreneur, jewellery that will be sold to unwitting foreign tourists in Jaipur. There are men from south India ordering pipes and electrical lights.

A trader from Chennai said there was now a factory in Zhejiang that was producing "authentic" Kanchipuram silk saris. In fact, Kanchipuram weavers had reportedly even been flown in to Zhejiang by an enterprising Chinese company for their brains to be picked. The saris were now being sold in Tamil Nadu, again to unsuspecting buyers. Investigations into this company’s whereabouts, however, proved fruitless.

There is a bit of Indian selling too. A trader from Delhi was negotiating prices for incense sticks with a tough Chinese woman entrepreneur. Was there actually a market for "Made in India" in China today? "Maybe only incense sticks," she shrugged. "Some Buddhists in China like to buy them."

Wang Yifeng is one of Yiwu’s most successful entrepreneurs. He started out on the factory floor but made a fortune when he started making artificial jewellery, which is one of the city’s big businesses purely because of the Indian demand.

That a city with no history in designing or producing jewellery is now one of the biggest centres of the trade underlines the resourcefulness of Yiwu’s entrepreneurs. The market exports several hundred million dollars’ worth of artificial jewellery to India and the world every year – in India they are sold everywhere, from Rajasthan to Andhra Pradesh.

It’s no surprise that India imports more goods from China than any other country, worth around $75 billion out of a two-way bilateral trade of $93 billion in 2019. After China, the most imports come from the US, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which together account for a little less than what China alone sells to India. It isn’t only the Yiwu type of ‘Made in China’ goods that are driving imports. Just as the country’s manufacturing is moving up the value chain, so are the kinds of goods India is buying.

READ MORE: China will extend IPO reforms to other markets when appropriate
The largest imports today are electronics, electrical machinery, heavy equipment and chemicals. China accounts for around 75 per cent of India’s telecom equipment imports. Three in every four Indian power plants use Chinese equipment. Between 70 and 80 per cent of all Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), a key import for India’s pharmaceuticals industry, come from China. All of this explains why, year after year, occasional social media campaigns to boycott China goods fall flat. Contrary to public imagination, we import far more than plastic buckets and cheap toys.

That it is cheaper for Indian companies to send designs to a factory in rural Zhejiang and have products – whether a baby Krishna painting or custom-made furniture or children’s toys – shipped to Kolkata or Mumbai, rather than have them made in India, is both an illustration of the success of the China supply chain and the failures of Indian manufacturing. Yiwu presents a snapshot of what China’s manufacturing did right – and why India continues to be in its tight embrace.

(This is an excerpt from India’s China Challenge: A Journey through China’s Rise and What It Means for India by Ananth Krishnan published by HarperCollins.)

 
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In fact, Kanchipuram weavers had reportedly even been flown in to Zhejiang by an enterprising Chinese company for their brains to be picked.
WTF???
Why did they pick those brains?Is this a metaphor or something?
 
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In fact, Kanchipuram weavers had reportedly even been flown in to Zhejiang by an enterprising Chinese company for their brains to be picked.
WTF???
Why did they pick those brains?Is this a metaphor or something?
 
. .
In fact, Kanchipuram weavers had reportedly even been flown in to Zhejiang by an enterprising Chinese company for their brains to be picked.
WTF???
Why did they pick those brains?Is this a metaphor or something?

The weavers would have been overjoyed for the respect shown to them and asked for their consultancy. In india they are one of the opressed castes.
 
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So basically, Indian traders go to Yiwu and ask fake products to be made so they can sell back to Indians as "Authentic" with huge margins. I am sure "Pulsar" motocycle that Indian PDF menbers keep bringing up to smear "Made in China" was one of them.

Indians are some notorious bargain hunters, they would ask a huge discount on already LOWEST priced low quality products at Yiwu market, so some unethical Chinese traders literally just sell Garbage to Indians.
 
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So basically, Indian traders go to Yiwu and ask fake products to be made so they can sell back to Indians as "Authentic" with huge margins. I am sure "Pulsar" motocycle that Indian PDF menbers keep bringing up to smear "Made in China" was one of them.

Indians are some notorious bargain hunters, they would ask a huge discount on already LOWEST priced low quality products at Yiwu market, so some unethical Chinese traders literally just sell Garbage to Indians.

Between 2005-2014 indian mobile companies used to do the same. Go to china get everything just put their brand name on it - micromax or something sell in india. They made billions of usd that way.
 
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Between 2005-2014 indian mobile companies used to do the same. Go to china get everything just put their brand name on it - micromax or something sell in india. They made billions of usd that way.

There is something that I would like every Chinese to learn from Japanese, that they would rather give up the business oppetunity than lowering down the quality of their products just to meet customer's demands.

For them, it was a humiliation to make something sub quality intentionally.
 
. . .
Yiwu, a small town in China's Zhejiang province, exports several hundred million dollars’ worth of artificial jewellery to India and the world every year among other products
by Ananth Krishnan
This Chinese town shows the success of China's supply chain and failures of Indian manufacturing's supply chain and failures of Indian manufacturing
A small town in China's Zhejiang province, Yiwu presents a snapshot of what China’s manufacturing did right. Photo: Wikimedia Commons

(ATF) Yiwu is a gritty town, where businesses appear to rise and fall every other week. Deals are struck with the shake of a hand. Contracts can mean nothing. The city was in the news for the wrong reasons in 2012 when two Indians, Deepak Raheja and Shyamsunder Agarwal, were held hostage by locals after their company allegedly defaulted on payments of 10 million yuan ($1.5 million).



These cases make the news, but they are outliers. You only need to see the steady stream of incoming businessmen (and they are mostly men) to see that the Yiwu model works.

There are traders from every corner of India patrolling the dimly lit corridors of the market, looking for bargains. One afternoon, I spotted a trader from Rajasthan procuring cartons of "authentic" Rajasthani jewellery from a Chinese entrepreneur, jewellery that will be sold to unwitting foreign tourists in Jaipur. There are men from south India ordering pipes and electrical lights.

A trader from Chennai said there was now a factory in Zhejiang that was producing "authentic" Kanchipuram silk saris. In fact, Kanchipuram weavers had reportedly even been flown in to Zhejiang by an enterprising Chinese company for their brains to be picked. The saris were now being sold in Tamil Nadu, again to unsuspecting buyers. Investigations into this company’s whereabouts, however, proved fruitless.

There is a bit of Indian selling too. A trader from Delhi was negotiating prices for incense sticks with a tough Chinese woman entrepreneur. Was there actually a market for "Made in India" in China today? "Maybe only incense sticks," she shrugged. "Some Buddhists in China like to buy them."

Wang Yifeng is one of Yiwu’s most successful entrepreneurs. He started out on the factory floor but made a fortune when he started making artificial jewellery, which is one of the city’s big businesses purely because of the Indian demand.

That a city with no history in designing or producing jewellery is now one of the biggest centres of the trade underlines the resourcefulness of Yiwu’s entrepreneurs. The market exports several hundred million dollars’ worth of artificial jewellery to India and the world every year – in India they are sold everywhere, from Rajasthan to Andhra Pradesh.

It’s no surprise that India imports more goods from China than any other country, worth around $75 billion out of a two-way bilateral trade of $93 billion in 2019. After China, the most imports come from the US, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, which together account for a little less than what China alone sells to India. It isn’t only the Yiwu type of ‘Made in China’ goods that are driving imports. Just as the country’s manufacturing is moving up the value chain, so are the kinds of goods India is buying.

READ MORE: China will extend IPO reforms to other markets when appropriate
The largest imports today are electronics, electrical machinery, heavy equipment and chemicals. China accounts for around 75 per cent of India’s telecom equipment imports. Three in every four Indian power plants use Chinese equipment. Between 70 and 80 per cent of all Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients (APIs), a key import for India’s pharmaceuticals industry, come from China. All of this explains why, year after year, occasional social media campaigns to boycott China goods fall flat. Contrary to public imagination, we import far more than plastic buckets and cheap toys.

That it is cheaper for Indian companies to send designs to a factory in rural Zhejiang and have products – whether a baby Krishna painting or custom-made furniture or children’s toys – shipped to Kolkata or Mumbai, rather than have them made in India, is both an illustration of the success of the China supply chain and the failures of Indian manufacturing. Yiwu presents a snapshot of what China’s manufacturing did right – and why India continues to be in its tight embrace.

(This is an excerpt from India’s China Challenge: A Journey through China’s Rise and What It Means for India by Ananth Krishnan published by HarperCollins.)







You also have to factor in that the Chinese have a MUCH higher average IQ compared to indians:

 
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There is something that I would like every Chinese to learn from Japanese, that they would rather give up the business oppetunity than lowering down the quality of their products just to meet customer's demands.

For them, it was a humiliation to make something sub quality intentionally.
You know the reason why China is growing everyday while Japan economy are dwindling and population are aging? Japanese standard of living are too high and they are very stressful. A successful business need to be flexible and act according to situation. I went to Japan once and saw a japanese traditional sandals. Its quite nice looking but definitely not worth USD300. And u know the reason why a lot of japanese business foldup and cannot compete with competitors.

If u are talking about luxury brand and item. That is another thing. But here in reality world, how much do luxury occupies necesity spot?
 
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