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And Stand ASEAN: ASEAN poised to become the next world factory

Aepsilons

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Most people see Thailand through the prism of pristine beaches and a laid-back lifestyle. Few, however, know it is Southeast Asia’s biggest automobile manufacturing hub and a leading production center for the global electronics and electrical parts industry.

Travel outside the capital of Bangkok to the vast industrial parks elsewhere in the country, and one will find multinational companies such as Sony, Seagate, Philips and LG having set up assembly operations for products including hard disk drives, integrated circuits, semiconductors and automotive electronics.

The same goes for Vietnam, which has attracted major investments from the likes of Samsung, LG, Canon and Nokia. Samsung alone accounts for around 20 percent of total Vietnamese exports.

Malaysia and the Philippines are now among the world’s leading hubs for information technology and business process outsourcing in Southeast Asia.

Much of the low-end, labor-intensive manufacturing that was once the sole domain of China has migrated to the Greater Mekong Subregion (GMS), Asia’s new low-cost production hub.

Comprising Vietnam, Myanmar, Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, the GMS also includes Yunnan province and the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region in southern China.

Although China is still perceived as the world’s factory, much of the low-end, labor-intensive manufacturing has moved offshore, with much of it within the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).

Investors, too, are increasingly turning their gaze toward the 10-nation regional trade bloc — Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam.

Although their economies are at different stages of development, they all have one thing in common — they share enormous potential for growth.

When the Asean Economic Community (AEC) comes into being at the end of this year, such growth potential is expected to accelerate in a market of more than 600 million people with a combined GDP of more than $2.4 trillion.

At the World Economic Forum in Jakarta, Indonesia, earlier this year, delegates were told Asean could expect to grow around 5 per cent annually over the next decade. The European Union, on the other hand, projects growth of around 2 per cent and the United States at 3 per cent.

Asean already accounts for 5 per cent of global manufacturing with dominant shares in such sectors as chemicals, food and beverage, metals and motor vehicles.

Sandra Seno-Alday, a lecturer at the University of Sydney Business School and the Sydney Southeast Asia Center, said one of the key factors that have contributed to the rise of Aseab as a manufacturing hub is wages. China has priced itself out of many sectors a long time ago, she added.

“The natural move, especially for low-end, labour-intensive manufacturing, has been to countries like Vietnam, Cambodia, Thailand and Indonesia, where wages are a lot lower,” she told China Daily Asia Weekly.

According to the International Labor Organisation’s Global Wage Report 2014/15, real wages in the Asia-Pacific region grew 6 per cent compared with a world average of 2 per cent. In China’s case it was 7.1 per cent, which has led many commentators to claim China’s competitive edge is being undermined.

But despite rising wages, China still remains highly competitive, because it now competes on productivity rather than low wages, and its comparative advantage is gradually shifting away from labor-intensive sectors such as garments toward higher-value added ones like electronics.

“A lot of the labor-intensive business has since shifted to Asean countries,” said Seno-Alday. And it is not just Chinese companies that have relocated to Southeast Asia.

“The Asean region is no stranger to international companies,” she added. “For the best part of two decades, significant foreign capital has moved into the region.

“Countries like Singapore and Thailand have developed the infrastructure needed to support international companies.”

Nations including Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Indonesia and the Philippines have developed their infrastructure to support international businesses. Such infrastructure covers export-processing zones, training and education systems and an investment-friendly regulatory climate.

Singapore has been the destination of choice for the regional operating hubs of many international companies, Seno-Alday said.

According to Glenn Maguire, chief economist with ANZ Bank for South Asia, Asean and Pacific, the full potential of Asean is “massively underappreciated”. He sees ASEAN as a manufacturing hub becoming just as important as China.

“Workers are not only growing older in North Asia, they are becoming more expensive,” he said in a commentary earlier this year.

Maguire added that the migration of manufacturing platforms south into the “youthful and cheaper Southeast Asian economies seems all but inevitable”.

“More importantly, the commencement of the Asean Economic Community from December (2015) will be an important multilateral enabler of the drift of factories in Asia to the south.”

A large, youthful work force and strategic location are just some of Aseab’s many advantages, which should draw more companies to establish production bases in the region, according to analysts.

“Productivity improvements and labor force expansions will drive most of the growth in Asean, along with increased trade fragmentation in the region,” Maguire said.

By “fragmentation” he means the process by which multinational companies break up the manufacture of their more elaborate goods into components, “leading to a rise in trade of those components, and an extension of global supply chains”.

Fukunari Kimura, an economist with Keio University in Tokyo, said Thailand’s auto sector is a good example.

“Despite Thailand’s domestic politics, it is still one of the world’s major automobile manufacturing hubs and a critical part of the supply chain network for a number of Japanese and US manufacturers,” he said.

A report by management consulting firm McKinsey Global Institute said that while China has many advantages, including a developed supply base, advanced infrastructure, robust manufacturing and engineering capacity, and a huge domestic market, there is still room for Southeast Asian economies to become the next “factories of the world”.

Wages are a key driver. According to the institute, the average cost of factory labor is about $7 a day in Vietnam and $9 in Indonesia — far lower than the $28 average in China, “which has posted a 19 per cent compound annual growth rate in labour costs since 2007”.

But not all sectors in the region are low-cost and labor-intensive. Air transport is one of them.

It is, in fact, one of the 12 priority sectors in the establishment of the AEC. According to consultancy IHS, rapid growth in “Asean airline fleet size will drive a boom in the Southeast Asian aviation industry”, particularly in the maintenance, repair and overhaul (MRO) sector over the next two decades.

Singapore is particularly well-positioned to benefit from this trend.

“Singapore is currently the leading hub for MRO in Asia, accounting for an estimated 25 percent of total Asian MRO market, and will be a key beneficiary of the rapid future growth of the ASEAN airline fleet,” IHS said.

“Singapore has become one of the centers of excellence globally for MRO for commercial aircraft engines.”

The decision by Rolls-Royce in February to establish a regional customer service center in Singapore will strengthen operational support to Asia-Pacific airlines and further build the city-state’s role as a leading global aircraft MRO hub. The center will support 20 per cent of Rolls-Royce’s large civil aircraft engines worldwide.

IHS said a new wave of shifting manufacturing production is currently underway in the electronics industry, as multinationals reposition their production of products like semiconductor chips, mobile phones and printers away from coastal China toward lower-cost production hubs.

Seno-Alday of the University of Sydney said the Asean region is no stranger to working with international companies.

“Significant foreign capital has already been invested in the region and that is likely to continue,” she said.

The 1997 financial crisis was good for the region, Seno-Alday added, as it forced “countries to put their financial houses and institutions in order”.

“Significant challenges, however, remain. These include physical infrastructure and transport systems, which have a detrimental effect on efficiency and productivity, and the need to speed up the development of the smaller economies in the region.”





Reference: The Jakarta Post
 
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I still remember decades ago we are far poorer than ASEAN countries.Now look at us,we are unstoppable.ASEAN countries could become the next factory of world,but they hardly can earn something if they can't launch their own companies and absorb foreign advanced technology for their own use.
 
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I still remember decades ago we are far poorer than ASEAN countries.Now look at us,we are unstoppable.ASEAN countries could become the next factory of world,but they hardly can earn something if they can't launch their own companies and absorb foreignadvanced technology for their own use.

There are some ASEAN countries that have a rather high GDP per capita, for example Singapore (one of the highest GDP per capitas and HDI indices in the world). As for middle income per capita status; i think we can consider Thailand and Malaysia in that schematic.

The two large democracies and economies in ASEAN that also shows great promise are The Republic of the Philippines and the Republic of Indonesia.

I don't think it is without a doubt of the economic growth and shear infrastructure developments of ASEAN-wide region:

Some quantitative data for us to feast upon:

ASEAN-graphic-large.gif



ASEAN-economic-growth.jpg



ebook-asean-investment.jpg



ASEAN+GDP+growth



U.S.-Imports-fr-ASEAN-Chart-and-Table-@-141025.jpg
 
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Asean is the next stronghold of manufacturing, especially Indonesia, Vietnam and Thailand.

It is therefore realistic to aim for a 1 trillion USD trade volume between China-ASEAN.

The only potential risk is radicalization and extremism (political and religious).
 
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Im tired of reading articles with same analogy World Factory, China, Cheap labor... every economic article would then compare with China sounds like every country heading the same path. So many of the like articles making them like clones. I would like to hear deep analysis economic model of each country; infrastructure, government strategy, strength, weakness. Obviously, not many journalists possessed such knowledge. Many people mistaken Vietnam opened up its economic because VCP follows China foot step, but the reality VCP's strategies and moves aim to counter China rise or prepare to protect themselves from the impact of a collapse China.

These articles for example are good read.

The New Asian Tiger? | Foreign Policy

Vietnam is not “China+1.”

Rising labor costs in China have already spurred some factory owners to shift production to Vietnam, which has an abundance of low-wage labor. The trend has fueled talk among many CEOs about Vietnam becoming Asia’s next big platform for manufacturing exports — a smaller version of China, or China+1.

But Vietnam is very different from China in two respects. First, Vietnam’s economy is driven more by personal consumption than China’s is. Consumption by households accounts for 65 percent of Vietnam’s GDP — an unusually high share in Asia. In China, by contrast, consumption accounts for just 36 percent of GDP.

Second, while China’s rapid economic growth has been fueled by manufacturing exports and extraordinarily high levels of capital investment, Vietnam’s economy is much more balanced between manufacturing and services, which each accounting for approximately 40 percent of GDP. Vietnam’s growth has been broad-based, with competitive niches across the economy. Over the past five years, output in the industry (including construction, manufacturing, mining, and utilities) and service sectors has grown at comparable annual rates of about 8 percent.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/12/22/business/global/22chinavietnam.html
As China Rises, So Does Vietnam

One of the biggest beneficiaries of China’s rapid economic ascent is not China at all, but rather its historic rival, occasional enemy and fellow socialist neighbor to the south, Vietnam.

Less than a decade ago, many economists and executives believed that China’s allure was creating a “giant sucking sound” of investment that could be heard in distant Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.

Vietnam has instead managed to tag along, however, thanks to its own program of economic overhauls, a fast-growing population of 87 million people, cheap labor and a free-trade agreement that has enabled Vietnam to become part of the vast global supply chain that feeds China’s manufacturing machine.

After following China down the path toward communism after World War II, therefore, Vietnam finds itself back in China’s ideological slipstream. This time, Hanoi is driving toward what its calls a “socialist-oriented market economy,” largely to keep from being run over by China’s economic juggernaut.


“If China had not been there,” said Jonathan Anderson, an economist at UBS in Hong Kong, “Vietnam may not have opened up.” Vietnam officially reopened its doors to foreign investors in 1986. But it did not really become part of the Asian economic boom until it won back its former enemy, the United States, which lifted a trade embargo in 1994 and normalized trade with Vietnam in 2000.

The U.S. trade agreement provided special incentives to textile and garment makers, since it immediately cut U.S. tariffs on Vietnamese made brassieres and panties from roughly 60 percent to zero. Textile and garment makers from South Korea and Taiwan flocked to Vietnam to open new factories.

Other light manufacturing soon followed, like home appliances and motorbike assemblers, and another industry hitherto dominated by China — furniture. “That whole industry just gradually moved into Vietnam,” said Frederick Burke, a lawyer at Baker & McKenzie in Ho Chi Minh City who has been working in Vietnam and advising its government for more than a decade.

When China joined the World Trade Organization in 2002, however, many feared that Vietnam and indeed much of Southeast Asia’s days as a favored destination for foreign manufacturing investment were over. Some economists even warned that the region would have to surrender manufactured export-led development and instead focus on feeding China’s voracious demand for raw materials.

China signed a free-trade agreement with Vietnam and the nine other members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations in 2002 that seemed to reinforce such fears. While the agreement gave poorer nations like Vietnam until 2015 to open up to Chinese goods, China eliminated tariffs on their agricultural products in 2003.

The agreement was a boon for Vietnam, which aside from being a leading exporter of rice, pepper and coffee, is a net oil exporter. But as other nations like Singapore, Malaysia and Thailand scrambled to climb the value-added ladder with niche products or more technologically advanced products that enabled them at the least to stay in the race with China, Vietnam seemed destined to become a pantry for a rapidly developing China.


Then China stumbled. Rampant technological piracy, nationalist demonstrations and shortages of skilled labor prompted many foreign companies, particularly Japanese, to move some production back to Southeast Asia. Worse, wages in China were rising fast. “In the late 1990s and early 2000s, you could hire as much labor as you wanted in China. People now talk about rising labor costs,” said Mr. Anderson.

Waiting with its own well-educated, disciplined but much cheaper work force was Vietnam. The minimum wage in Vietnam’s two largest cities is still about $75 a month, as little as half what it costs to hire a worker in China’s factory province of Guangdong, according to Dinh Tuan Viet, senior economist at the World Bank in Hanoi.

This year, Intel opened a new, $1 billion semiconductor factory near Ho Chi Minh City to replace facilities in Malaysia, the Philippines and China. Canon’s printer factory near Hanoi, with more than 18,000 employees, is the company’s largest.

Vietnam has now managed to establish itself firmly in China’s supply chain. Many of the parts for Canon’s factory come from China, for example, a fact that underscores the downside to Vietnamese efforts to follow in China’s manufacturing footsteps — imports of machinery and equipment from China contribute to a roughly $11.5 billion trade deficit with China as Vietnam races to build up its infrastructure and manufacturing capacity.

Now, with China trying to take its next major leap forward into cleaner, more consumer-focused industries, the question is whether Vietnam has gotten far enough to advance in step with China, Mr. Viet said. “Is Vietnam ready and capable of absorbing a new wave of foreign investment resulting from ‘structural change’ in China?” he asked. “It seems to me there are still a lot of constraints for Vietnam to take this chance: poor infrastructure and an underdeveloped logistics industry, an abundant but unskilled labor force, etc.”

For all of China’s many obstacles, Vietnam still ranks below it in the World Bank’s survey on the ease of doing business.

That survey ranks Vietnam above China in starting a business and employing workers, but below China in protecting investors and enforcing contracts. Vietnam also ranks low on Transparency International’s Corruption Perceptions Index — 116th, compared with 78th for China.

Still, Vietnam seems to have won favor as an alternative to China for foreign investors. Foreign direct investment into Vietnam rose almost fourfold between 2005 and 2008, according to the World Bank, to $9.58 billion, and slipped 20 percent during the crisis in 2009 to $7.6 billion. In China it almost halved.
 
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The whole ASEAN region can not become the next world factory due to some of ASEAN members are not allowed to join the TPP deal which will help them to reduce the exporting tax to Zero to TPP nations

Thats why, there is a dying & collapsing ASEAN member in the region due to CNY devaluation.
 
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Impressive Vietnam, which will be a role model unlike the unpredictable Philippines.

Vietnam might as well be the next Asian miracle.

China aims for 100 billion USD trade with our Vietnamese partners.
 
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The whole ASEAN region can not become the next world factory due to some of ASEAN members are not allowed to join the TPP deal which will help them to reduce the exporting tax to Zero to TPP nations

Thats why, there is a dying & collapsing ASEAN member in the region due to CNY devaluation.

Well, you have to understand that ASEAN has an extensive FTA with Japan, and a host of other countries. Its best we address current issues right now and not debate on what if possibilities such as the effects of TPP actualization processes since TPP has yet to be actualized operationally speaking.

Lastly as per IMF and ADB predictive measures:

Three countries to look into are:

  1. Indonesia
  2. Philippines
  3. Vietnam
 
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Well, you have to understand that ASEAN has an extensive FTA with Japan, and a host of other countries. Its best we address current issues right now and not debate on what if possibilities such as the effects of TPP actualization processes since TPP has yet to be actualized operationally speaking.

Lastly as per IMF and ADB predictive measures:

Three countries to look into are:

  1. Indonesia
  2. Philippines
  3. Vietnam
Okay, we have FTA, but its only work when you set a factory in none TPP ASEAN meber but you dont have the plan to export your products to TPP members like USA-CAD-Aussie etc

And if your product can not export to USA-CAD-Aussie, then your economy (even Japan) will be in big trouble. Just look at N.Korea-Russia-Iran (during US sanction) or even VN before 1990 etc for the lesson.
 
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Might become China's world factory ;-)

Literally the World's Factory. The bilateral trade between Japan and ASEAN have reached $300 Billion this year alone. Bilateral Trade between Japan and China+Taiwan+HK has already reached a record $500 Billion this second fiscal quarter. So we are looking at Japan-China-ASEAN trilateral trade pathway reaching $1 Trillion.

Now, of course we have to throw into the equation the ASEAN-China trade relationship, and that's a substantial sum in its own right. As China's cost of living and standard of pay for workers increases, it will become increasingly evident that most manufacturing sites stationed in China will transition to ASEAN. I think we are seeing this with the European Union and the United States ever increasing manufacturing sites or at least developing feasibility studies in ASEAN countries.

Either case, ASEAN is poised to grow and is in a win-win situation. She (ASEAN) will receive exponential blessings , i suppose, from Japan, China, The European Union, United States and other pertinent world economies.

;)
 
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Literally the World's Factory. The bilateral trade between Japan and ASEAN have reached $300 Billion this year alone. Bilateral Trade between Japan and China+Taiwan+HK has already reached a record $500 Billion this second fiscal quarter. So we are looking at Japan-China-ASEAN trilateral trade pathway reaching $1 Trillion.

Now, of course we have to throw into the equation the ASEAN-China trade relationship, and that's a substantial sum in its own right. As China's cost of living and standard of pay for workers increases, it will become increasingly evident that most manufacturing sites stationed in China will transition to ASEAN. I think we are seeing this with the European Union and the United States ever increasing manufacturing sites or at least developing feasibility studies in ASEAN countries.

Either case, ASEAN is poised to grow and is in a win-win situation. She (ASEAN) will receive exponential blessings , i suppose, from Japan, China, The European Union, United States and other pertinent world economies.

;)
Time to wake up bro, if US support the whole ASEAN, then he would invite all to TPP deal.
 
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Time to wake up bro, if US support the whole ASEAN, then he would invite all to TPP deal.

I am very much a wake (drinking coffee is my repertoire, lol, i jest, i jest... ;) ). No but on a serious note tho, my friend, trade growth between Japan-China with ASEAN is predicted to grow all the more. And as per ADB and IMF predictions for 2015 till 2025 --- there is one country that is poised to grow at 14% per annum: INDONESIA.

Yes. Indonesia.

Second to Indonesia is the Philippines.

Third is Vietnam.

So calm down, cool down, be happy. ASEAN literally will be lifted up by collective growth.
 
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