logo
China factories cut shifts and workers' pay as U.S. tariffs bite

China factories cut shifts and workers' pay as U.S. tariffs bite

Japan Times2 days ago
Mike Chai aims to cut wage costs at his kitchen cabinet factory by about 30% to remain competitive against other Chinese firms, which have stopped selling to the U.S. due to steep tariffs and are now coming after his long-time customers in Australia.
Chai had already halved his workforce to 100 people since the pandemic and says he has no more room to trim. Instead, he is shortening shifts and asking workers to take unpaid leave — an increasingly common practice that has become a hidden deflationary force in the world's second-largest economy.
"We're in survival mode," said the 53-year-old, adding that his company, Cartia Global Manufacturing, in the southern city of Foshan, "barely breaks even."
"I told them, you don't want our factory to go broke. You've worked here for 10-15 years, let's do it together."
China's headline unemployment rate has held around 5% as U.S. President Donald Trump raised tariffs on imports from China by 30 percentage points this year. Washington and Beijing extended on Monday a tariff truce for another 90 days, during which tariffs will not return to April's triple-digit levels.
But economists say underemployment — which, in common with other economies, is not tracked in data — is worsening due to higher levies and industrial overcapacity, squeezing workers' income, undermining their confidence about the future and prompting them to spend less.
Consumer confidence lingers near record lows, retail sales have weakened, and inflation in July was zero.
Alicia Garcia-Herrero, chief Asia-Pacific economist at Natixis, says it is China's manufacturing workers who suffer while exports — and the economy — keep growing despite the U.S. tariffs.
"It's the people who are hammered by this model of huge competition, lower prices, thus you need to lower costs, thus you need to lower wages. It's a spiral," she said.
"The model is crazy. I'm sorry, but if you need to export at a loss, do not export."
A street near a short-term labor market at Datang village in Guangzhou, Guangdong province |
REUTERS
Statistics will not reveal Chinese workers as "the main losers" in the trade war because "they will not become unemployed, but they will get unpaid leave of absence or work fewer hours," she added.
Chai has already lost two key customers in his main market of Australia after other Chinese firms cut their prices and his factory is operating at half-capacity.
"All those who have (left) America have come to Australia," he said. "A lot of new supply is knocking on my customers' doors."
While Chinese exports to the U.S. dropped 21.7% year-on-year in July, they rose by 9.2% to the European Union, 16.6% to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations and 14.8% to Australia.
Chai plans to cut prices by about 10%. To afford that, he is also cutting overtime — which previously made up more than a third of workers' income — from 28 days per month in total to about 10. On average, his workers earn 5,000 yuan ($697) a month before overtime.
Factory bosses are also turning to temporary workers, hiring them for new orders and dismissing them when demand dries up.
Dave Fong, who co-owns three factories in southern China making everything from school bags to climbing gear and industrial machinery, says he laid off 30 full-time workers at one of the plants, then rehired some of them on a temporary basis to fulfill unexpected orders.
"We prefer temporary contracts so we don't need to pay pension or insurance," said Fong. "It's by day or by hour."
"If we don't do that, the company hits a dead end. The market is weak because consumption power has decreased. Another factor is trade, especially with the U.S."
Sudden drop
Temporary work is common in China, especially among its nearly 300 million rural migrants.
Chen Chuyan, a recruiting agent in the central city of Wuhan, says the going rate has dropped to 14 yuan per hour from 16 yuan last year.
"There's a long line of people waiting for job interviews every day, but the factories don't have that much demand," Chen said.
People unload material from a van outside a small-scale factory at Datang village in Guangzhou, Guangdong province |
REUTERS
Alan Zhang has taken such jobs in Datang village, a cluster of small garment factories in the southern city of Guangzhou, since 2021. Back then, he earned 400 yuan a day, but now he struggles to find work paying even half that amount.
"If it's just a couple hundred yuan, I won't take it," said the 30-year-old, after scanning handwritten ads for temporary work held by recruiters lounging on scooters.
"I don't know what happened. Suddenly it got really hard to find anything. Prices dropped fast," said Zhang, who pays 700 yuan per month to rent a studio flat in Datang with his wife, who also works in clothing factories.
He worked just 14 days in July, which worries him because he must raise 10,000 yuan every year for his son's kindergarten fees. The boy lives with grandparents in Zhang's hometown in neighbouring Fujian province.
"If manufacturing wages are being squeezed, then the wider economy would feel deflationary pressure," said Richard Yarrow, a fellow at Harvard Kennedy School's Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government.
"This is definitely a growing issue for some of the lower-skill types of manufacturing in China, such as textiles, furniture, and simple electronics."
Low-balled
At the Longhua employment market in the tech hub of Shenzhen, dozens of people browsed bulletin boards for electronics factory jobs paying 17-28 yuan per hour.
Mo, 26, who has a degree in digital marketing but could not find a job in the field, had already had two interviews by early afternoon. He declined the offers because the terms were not as advertised.
"They'll say 23 yuan, but actually give you 20," said Mo, only giving his surname for privacy reasons. "Then they'll take management fees, housing, cleaning, and whatever else they can deduct."
Huang, 46, was checking the market for a fifth straight day, having arrived by bus from the southwestern province of Yunnan.
He managed real estate projects before the property market crash. Now he is divorced and lives on 10 yuan meals, paying 25 yuan per night for a bed in a dormitory. He cannot afford anything else until he finds work.
"I had one interview this morning but they asked for an upfront placement fee of 80 yuan," said Huang, dragging a small suitcase.
"So I didn't go. I bought some food instead."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Dollar higher as US producer prices surge in July
Dollar higher as US producer prices surge in July

Nikkei Asia

time4 hours ago

  • Nikkei Asia

Dollar higher as US producer prices surge in July

NEW YORK (Reuters) -- The U.S. dollar snapped a two-day losing streak on Thursday as data showed U.S. producer prices increased more than expected in July amid a surge in the costs of services and goods, suggesting a broader pickup in inflation in the months ahead. The hot measure of inflation at the wholesale level follows the release on Tuesday of a better-than-feared rise in consumer prices in July, which emboldened traders to boost bets on interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve in coming months. While Thursday's data did not upset the case for a September rate cut it did raise worries that tariffs could still stir up inflation in coming months and change the course of interest rate cuts for the rest of the year. It also hurt the case for the Fed to resume cutting rates with a 50 basis point cut in September, something Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested in an interview on Wednesday. "I think that was never particularly likely, but presumably this PPI report quashes that," Matt Weller, global head of market research at StoneX. More importantly the inflation data raises questions about whether the Fed can deliver an aggressive pace of cuts for the rest of the year, he said. "Some people were saying that we could see three consecutive 25 basis point rate cuts ... but if anything approaching this level of inflation is in place it seems like we might be looking at more of a max of two interest rate cuts and even that might be questionable," Weller said. While financial markets have priced in an interest rate cut from the Federal Reserve next month, rising services inflation and the expectation tariffs could still significantly boost goods prices left some economists doubtful of an aggressive resumption in policy easing in the absence of further labor market deterioration. Traders still see a Fed rate cut on Sept. 17 as a near certainty, according to LSEG data. The dollar index, measuring the currency against a basket of peers, was 0.5% higher at 98.17. The euro was 0.5% weaker at $1.16485 while the British pound eased 0.3% to $1.3538. Still, analysts warned against expecting a sustained rebound in the buck. "The market is very much likely to remain 'all in' on the idea of a September cut, at least until we hear from Powell at Jackson Hole next week," Michael Brown, market analyst at online broker Pepperstone in London, said, referring to the Fed's Jackson Hole Economic Symposium later this month. The yen rose against the dollar earlier in the session after Bessent suggested the Bank of Japan needs to raise rates again soon, before ceding ground to trade about flat on the day at 147.385 yen to a dollar. The stronger greenback weighed on the Australian dollar even as upbeat jobs data calmed concerns about a downturn in the labour market and lessened the need for another rate cut in the very near term. The Aussie was last down 0.8% to $0.6493. Meanwhile, bitcoin earlier hit its first record peak since July 14, pushing as high as $124,480.82 before trimming gains and was last down nearly 4% at around $118,536. Bitcoin was already underpinned by increased institutional money flows this year in the wake of a spate of regulatory changes spearheaded by Trump, who has billed himself the "cryptocurrency president." In the latest move, an executive order last week paved the way to allow crypto assets in 401(k) retirement accounts. "Corporate treasuries like MicroStrategy and Block Inc. continue to buy bitcoin," said IG analyst Tony Sycamore.

CK Hutchison downplays port sale snag as Victor Li skips briefings
CK Hutchison downplays port sale snag as Victor Li skips briefings

Nikkei Asia

time6 hours ago

  • Nikkei Asia

CK Hutchison downplays port sale snag as Victor Li skips briefings

A Chinese flag flutters outside the Cheung Kong Center building, CK Hutchison's headquarters, in Hong Kong on April 1. The conglomerate has been under scrutiny over a move to sell dozens of global ports. © Reuters KENJI KAWASE and PEGGY YE August 14, 2025 22:01 JST TOKYO/HONG KONG -- Victor Li Tzar-kuoi, the chairman of Hong Kong conglomerate CK Hutchison Holdings, skipped earnings briefings with analysts on Thursday, an unusual move as the group brushed off concerns over the fate of a major port sale.

Japan and China commemorate World War II anniversary on different dates
Japan and China commemorate World War II anniversary on different dates

The Mainichi

time6 hours ago

  • The Mainichi

Japan and China commemorate World War II anniversary on different dates

BENXI, China (AP) -- Eighty years after the end of World War II, Japan and China are marking the anniversary with major events, but on different dates and in different ways. Japan remembers the victims in a solemn ceremony on Aug. 15, the day then-Emperor Hirohito announced in a crackly radio message that the government had surrendered, while China showcases its military strength with a parade on Sept. 3, the day after the formal surrender on an American battleship in Tokyo Bay. Japan occupied much of China before and during WWII in a devastating and brutal invasion that, by some estimates, killed 20 million people. The wartime experience still bedevils relations between the two countries today. A museum in the Chinese city of Benxi highlights the struggles of anti-Japanese resistance fighters who holed up in log cabins through fierce winters in the country's northeast, then known as Manchuria, before retreating into Russia. They returned only after the Soviet Union declared war on Japan and launched an offensive into Manchuria on Aug. 9, 1945 -- the same day the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Nagasaki -- adding to the pressure on Japan to surrender. Nowadays, it is China's military that raises alarm as it seeks to enforce the government's territorial claims in the Pacific. When Japan talks of building up its defense to counter the threat, its militaristic past gives China a convenient retort. "We urge Japan to deeply reflect on its historical culpability, earnestly draw lessons from history and stop using hype over regional tensions and China-related issues to conceal its true intent of military expansion," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Guo Jiakun said last month. Japan's surrender broadcast Hirohito's prerecorded surrender broadcast on Aug. 15, 1945, was incomprehensible to many Japanese. He used arcane language and the sound quality was poor. What was important, historians say, was that the message came from the emperor himself. Hirohito was considered a living god, and the war was fought in his name. Most Japanese had never heard his voice before. "The speech is a reminder of what it took to end the wrong war," Nihon University professor Takahisa Furukawa told The Associated Press in 2015. The current emperor, Hirohito's grandson Naruhito, and the prime minister are set to make remarks at the annual ceremony in Tokyo on Aug. 15, broadcast live by public broadcaster NHK. At last year's event, Naruhito expressed deep remorse over Japan's actions during the war. But on the same day, three Japanese cabinet ministers visited Tokyo's Yasukuni shrine, drawing criticism from China and South Korea, which see the shrine as a symbol of militarism. China marks Victory Day Japan surrendered on Sept. 2, 1945, in a ceremony on board the American battleship USS Missouri. The foreign minister, in a top hat and tails, and the army chief signed on behalf of Hirohito. The signatories on the other side were U.S. Gen. Douglas MacArthur and representatives from China and other nations that had fought Japan. China designated the next day, Sept. 3, as Victory Day. Eleven years ago, the Communist Party stepped up how China marks the anniversary. All of China's top leaders, including President Xi Jinping, attended a commemorative event on Sept. 3. The renewed focus came at a time of rising tension with Japan over conflicting interpretations of wartime history and a still-ongoing territorial dispute in the East China Sea. The next year, China staged a military parade on the 70th anniversary of the end of the war. A decade later, preparations are underway for another grand parade with missiles, tanks and fighter jets overhead. Russian President Vladimir Putin is among those expected to attend.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store