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This is very bad for India...

by78

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India has completely missed the manufacturing boat. Low-cost labor is now being replaced by robots. Where will India find the manufacturing jobs it needs to employ the hundreds of millions of uneducated young people over the next two decades?

Why China May Have the Most Factory Robots in the World by 2017 - Real Time Economics - WSJ

Why China May Have the Most Factory Robots in the World by 2017

Having devoured many of the world’s factory jobs, China is now handing them over to robots.

China is already the world’s largest market for industrial robots—sales of the machines last year grew 54% from 2013. The nation is expected to have more factory robots than any other country on earth by 2017, according to the German-based International Federation of Robotics.

A perfect storm of economic forces is fueling the trend. Chinese labor costs have soared, undermining the calculus that brought all those jobs to China in the first place, and new robot technology is cheaper and easier to deploy than ever before.

Not to mention that many of China’s fastest-growing industries, such as autos, tend to rely on high levels of automation regardless of where the factories are built.

“We think of them producing cheap widgets,” but that’s not what they’re focused on, says Adams Nager, an economic research analyst at the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation in Washington. Mr. Nager says China is letting low-cost production shift out of the country and is focusing instead on capital-intensive industries such as steel and electronics where automation is a driving force.

China’s emergence as an automation hub contradicts many assumptions about robots.

Economists often view automation as a way for advanced economies to retain industries that might otherwise move offshore, since the focus is finding ways to save on costly labor. Some of that is certainly going on. But increasingly, robots are gobbling up jobs in developing countries, reducing the potential job creation associated with building new factories.

“China has explosive growth (in robots),” says Henrik Christensen, head of Georgia Institute of Technology’s robotics lab, adding that all the world’s biggest automation companies are rushing to build factories there to supply demand for new machines.

The International Federation of Robotics estimates about 225,000 industrial robots were sold throughout the world last year—27% more than the year before and a new record. Of those, about 56,000 were sold in China.

The trade group says one reason China will continue booming is because it has relatively low “robot density.” China has about 30 robots for every 10,000 factory workers. In Germany, the density is 10 times higher. In Japan, it’s 11 times higher.

“The automation of China’s production plants has just started,” said Per Vegard Nerseth, a managing director of ABB Robotics, in a report prepared by the trade group.
 
Get a life pimp,,, get over your India obsession and move on with some dignity
 
India among world's top 10 manufacturing nations: UNIDO

India among world's top 10 manufacturing nations: UNIDO | Page 2

Total manufacturing output in USD for 2012:

1 China 2,556,032,874,375
2 United States 1,993,792,694,304
3 Japan 1,107,680,687,171
4 Germany 686,578,945,311
5 South Korea 315,885,233,564
6 Italy 279,917,183,345
7 Russia 262,378,979,571
8 Brazil 253,805,018,367
9 India 239,526,996,470
10 France 233,108,469,183
11 United Kingdom 219,533,466,624
12 Indonesia 210,176,258,694
13 Mexico 205,000,814,587
14 Canada 185,632,228,147
15 Spain 161,779,564,642


I guess going by78's logic its doom for Brazil, India, Indonesia and Mexico :lol:


However, I think more than robots, 3d printing might revolutionize the manufacturing industry.
 
India among world's top 10 manufacturing nations: UNIDO

India among world's top 10 manufacturing nations: UNIDO | Page 2

Total manufacturing output in USD for 2012:

1 China 2,556,032,874,375
2 United States 1,993,792,694,304
3 Japan 1,107,680,687,171
4 Germany 686,578,945,311
5 South Korea 315,885,233,564
6 Italy 279,917,183,345
7 Russia 262,378,979,571
8 Brazil 253,805,018,367
9 India 239,526,996,470
10 France 233,108,469,183
11 United Kingdom 219,533,466,624
12 Indonesia 210,176,258,694
13 Mexico 205,000,814,587
14 Canada 185,632,228,147
15 Spain 161,779,564,642


I guess going by78's logic its doom for Brazil, India, Indonesia and Mexico :lol:


However, I think more than robots, 3d printing might revolutionize the manufacturing industry.


India, with a population of over 1.2 billion, is ranked a lowly 9th in manufacturing, lagging far behind even the tiny South Korea, with a population of only 50 million.

And about this 3D printing revolution you speak of, what share of 3D printing market does India have? Can you point me to some major Indian 3D printing manufacturers?

Oh I forgot, ancient India invented 3D printing, and 52% of all 3D printing engineers are Indians...
 
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And what will your Chinese aged workforce will do ? And what will Chinese old folks which will form the majority of Population will do ? How will you calm down your with huge free service schemes for your people ! You will go broke in just couple of decades . Keep braging about tampered Communists data . You will end up like mini USSR . Then you will know the problem this 21st century government of China made . From great economic super power in 2020s to bankrupted Country . At that time India should do the servings like a breakfast bread
 
People just "assumed" (always a bad idea) that our manufacturing/export prowess was simply due to low wages and/or a youthful population, which never made sense otherwise Sub-Saharan Africa would be the manufacturing powerhouse of the world.

So they just "sat around", expecting that once Chinese wages started to soar, and we started to lose the demographic dividend, then China would automatically lose manufacturing competitiveness. Thus the problem would "solve itself", without any need for them to do anything proactive for their own benefit.

Except the opposite has happened.

Chinese wages have been soaring yes, but our manufacturing and exports have been soaring too. :lol:

Infrastructure, industrial robotics, supply chains, what else?

Here is the "cover" image from last week's Economist:

B_9dgWCWUAAotYR.jpg:large


Sorry to disappoint all of our "well-wishers", but we did exactly what we had to do, and succeeded. :azn:

We have the capital (over $4 trillion in currency reserves), the technology, the willpower, and the national infrastructure base (not to mention supply chains) to make industrial robotics competitive like no where else in the world. And you are seeing that competitiveness now, whenever you buy any sort of manufactured product.
 
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