CHINA IN CRISIS AS WELL!



ORIGINAL POST
Posted by DaHKGKid 17 yrs ago
Monday, November 3, 2008

China going into a DEPRESSION TOO?

Financially troubled plants are being abandoned by the boss, leaving behind unpaid workers and debts.

By Don Lee

November 3, 2008


Reporting from Shaoxing, China -- First, Tao Shoulong burned his company's financial books. He then sold his private golf club memberships and disposed of his Mercedes S-600 sedan.


And then he was gone.


And just like that, China's biggest textile dye operation -- with four factories, a campus the size of 31 football fields, 4,000 workers and debts of at least $200 million -- was history.


"We're pretty much dead now," said Mao Youming, one of 300 suppliers stiffed last month by Tao's company, Jianglong Group. Lighting a cigarette in a coffee shop here, the 38-year-old spoke calmly about the bleak future of his industrial gas business. Tao owed him $850,000, Mao said, about 60% of his annual revenue. "We cannot pay our workers' salaries. We are about to be bankrupt too."


Government statistics show that 67,000 factories of various sizes were shuttered in China in the first half of the year, said Cao Jianhai, an industrial economics researcher at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. By year's end, he said, more than 100,000 plants will have closed.


As more factories in China shut down, stories of bosses running away have become familiar, multiplying the damage of China's worst manufacturing decline in at least a decade.


Even before the global financial crisis, factory owners in China were straining under soaring labor and raw-material costs, an appreciating Chinese currency and tougher legal, tax and environmental requirements. When the credit crunch took hold -- prompting Western businesses to slash orders for Chinese goods and bankers to curtail loans to factories -- many operations were pushed over the edge.

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COMMENTS
namaste 17 yrs ago
Oh for sure. There are so many factories closing and many jobs being lost (including my husbands). I would think this will affect many HK expats.

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DaHKGKid 17 yrs ago
Yes, many expats are ultimately responsible for these factories and others have direct ties to the products they produce so the fallout will continue.

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