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Six Myths About China

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Six Myths About China | Articles | Chief Executive - The magazine for the Chief Executive Officer3/14/2010

Understanding China is critical to competitive success. Unfortunately, what you understand could be dead wrong
BY ANIL K. GUPTA AND HAIYAN WANG

The world’s economic center of gravity is shifting rapidly towards Asia and, in particular, China. Within 15 to 20 years, China’s economy will almost certainly overtake that of the U.S. and become the world’s largest. Given China’s rapidly rising importance, it is critical that policymakers in both government as well as corporate circles have an accurate understanding of where it is coming from, where it is today and where it is headed. Unfortunately, myths about China appear to dominate viewpoints and discussions even in otherwise-well-educated circles. Here are six commonly believed myths about the emerging



Myth No. 1:

Exports have been and remain the primary driver of China’s growth.


It’s easy to be mesmerized by data pertaining to overall export revenues, which totaled more than 30 percent of China’s gross domestic product (GDP) in 2007 and 2008 (see Estimated GDP Figures, this page). GDP, however, refers to value added by the economy and not to revenues generated by its enterprises. By most estimates, value added within China constitutes about one-third of the country’s exports. Even after hefty growth over the last several years, exports presently account for only about 10 to 12 percent of China’s GDP (and about 20 percent of the annual growth in GDP). The remaining 88–90 percent comes from domestic spending and domestic investment. The next time you buy an iPod or an iPhone that says “Assembled in China,” it may be well to remember that, almost certainly, only a fraction of the value in that gadget was added in China. Given the likelihood of slower growth in most developed economies and rising consumption within China, exports will quite likely be less important for China’s economy in the future than they have been so far.

Estimates for 2009 are illustrative. For the year just ended, even as China’s GDP grew by about 8.5 percent, its exports are estimated to have dropped by about 16 percent. (See China’s Exports of Goods and Services below)


While piracy in China is not dead, it is a declining challenge for both commercial as well as consumer products and, in any case, pales in comparison with other challenges.

Myth No. 2:

China is merely an imitator, not an innovator.


Until the mid-1970s, Japan too was regarded as an imitator. China is evolving at a faster rate. From 2004 to 2008, China-origin patents granted by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office (USPTO) grew at about a 33 percent annual rate relative to virtually zero growth in the number of all patents granted (see Number of Patents Granted by the U.S. Patent & Trademark Office below). If current trends continue, by 2020, the number of China-origin patents granted by the USPTO will exceed those from Germany, the U.K., France, and Italy combined.



As with painting, sculpture or architecture, imitation is a necessary first step towards becoming a successful innovator. Creativity without discipline results in chaos, not innovation. China has demonstrated its ability to be disciplined. The government is now pushing scientific and technological innovation with all its might. China’s R&D-to-GDP ratio was 1.3 percent in 2005 and is being steadily ramped up toward a goal of 2.5 percent by 2020. Also, as we note below, enforcement of IPR laws is now becoming a ground level reality.

According to a recent report by Reuters, China had the world’s largest number of patent filings relating to wind, solar and marine technology, followed by Japan, the U.S. and Germany, in that order. BYD, a China-based global leader in lithium-ion battery technology, has become the world’s first company to start selling a plug-in hybrid car and is emerging as a credible contender in the global electric car race.

Myth No. 3:

Intellectual property risks are the biggest challenge that foreign companies face in China.


China’s historical disregard for intellectual property rights (IPR) is well known and has been extensively documented in legal skirmishes such as those between Cisco and Huawei, General Motors and Chery Auto, and Microsoft and an army of pirates in small shops as well as high-rise offices. However, China is changing rapidly and, even in the IPR arena, today’s China is quite different from that of even five years ago. First, the government has now become extremely serious about developing science, technology and innovation as the new basis for China’s competitiveness. It has concluded that a weak IPR regime is as much a deterrent to domestic innovators as it is to foreign companies. IPR lawsuits by Chinese companies against each other are now a welcome and growing phenomenon.

Second, large publicly listed and increasingly global Chinese companies are not only more professionally run than the purely domestic Chinese companies of yesterday, they are also increasingly wary of the reputational and business risks associated with facing an IPR lawsuit outside China. Third, on the consumer goods front, as China’s retail sector has become increasingly consolidated into large chains, the new intermediaries are far more interested in selling higher-margin genuine products than very low-priced, low-margin fakes.

In short, while piracy in China is not dead, it is a declining challenge for both commercial and consumer products and, in any case, pales in comparison with other challenges, such as widespread corruption, a brutally competitive marketplace, a vast and diverse country, and government regulations that can change rapidly and may vary from one province to another.

Myth No. 4:

Through acquisitions, Chinese companies are on the verge of becoming global champions in many industries.


Many Chinese companies, often backed by the government, do have the ambition to become global champions - witness the recently announced agreement by Ford to sell its Volvo brand and operations to China’s Zhejiang Geely Holding Group. However, lofty ambitions are not the same as the organizational capability to acquire and integrate sizable companies in other countries.

On the road to becoming truly global enterprises, Chinese companies suffer from significant capability gaps in several important domains: corporate finance, strategic analysis, the art and science of competing through differentiation, post-merger integration, managing horizontal organizations, managing across cultural diversity and widespread fluency in the English language. This is why, unlike companies from India, there have been very few major acquisitions by Chinese companies. TCL’s acquisitions of French consumer electronics businesses proved to be disasters. Despite a concerted effort at integrating IBM’s PC business, Lenovo continues to face market share challenges in almost every major market and has been forced to devote more of its attention to the domestic market within China. And Shanghai Auto, the big car company, recently witnessed an almost complete wipeout of its $500 million dollar investment in South Korea’s Ssangyong Motor. Not surprisingly, outbound FDI by Chinese companies has either focused on natural resource companies in Africa and Latin America or taken the form of minority investments rather than outright control.

Chinese companies and Chinese people are eager learners. One day, there will be many truly global enterprises with roots or headquarters in China. However, that day is at least 10 years away.


Myth No. 5:

Rising costs in China will spark a return of jobs to the U.S.


In recent years, several developments have led to a significant rise in labor and other costs in China, particularly in the more developed east coast regions. First, the Chinese yuan has appreciated by about 18 percent against the U.S. dollar since 2005. Second, as part of its 11th Five-Year Plan, launched in 2006, the government has enacted and started enforcing tough environmental control regulations. In the short term, these regulations have resulted in an increase in the cost of operations in China. Third, a new labor law designed to protect workers’ interests and remedy widespread abuses went into effect on January 1, 2008. The law is being implemented vigorously, especially by foreign enterprises, and has resulted in at least a 20 percent increase in labor costs. Fourth, a new corporate income tax law designed to harmonize tax rates has increased the tax rate applicable to foreign invested enterprises from15 percent to 25 percent, while reducing it for domestic-invested enterprises from 35 percent to 25 percent.

Put together, all of these developments have significantly increased the cost of doing business in China. However, total labor costs (including benefits) on China’s east coast are still less than $2.50/hour as compared with more than $20/hour in the U.S. - which makes the theory that rising costs in China will lead to a shift of jobs to the U.S. misguided. Instead, what is happening is a shift from eastern China to cheaper inland locations within China or to even lower cost countries such as Vietnam, Indonesia or India.

Myth No. 6:

The best way to prepare American children for the new era is to make them fluent in Mandarin.


Who wins or loses any future competition between the Americans (or Europeans or Indians) and the Chinese will be decided not by who can speak Mandarin better but by who is stronger in math, science and engineering, and who can be more innovative and cost efficient. American children are already behind their Chinese peers in math and science skills. Any diversion of time and energy towards learning Mandarin will only make a bad situation worse. Also, English is the language of the world. And as the native language of only one-fifth of the world’s population, Mandarin will never catch up. The Chinese will acquire English language fluency far faster than non-Chinese will acquire fluency in Mandarin. Finally, given that a Chinese counterpart will always be stronger in Mandarin, the last thing a non-Chinese should do is to negotiate with a Chinese in the latter’s native language. Even if you speak decent Mandarin, it would be wise to rely on excellent translators.

It is far more important to be deeply knowledgeable about China - its history, its culture, its geography, its economy and its politics - than to be able to speak Mandarin. If you know China well but have to communicate through your own highly capable translator, the Chinese will respect you. However, if you can speak Mandarin but are ignorant about China, they will likely run circles around you. Fortunately, for the non-Chinese, learning about China is a far easier and more enjoyable task than learning how to speak, read and write the language.
 
July 18, 2011
Counterpoint: Debunking Myths About China
By ERIC X. LI

SHANGHAI — On these pages on July 1, two prominent China watchers — David Shambaugh (“China’s Communist Party at 90”) and Minxin Pei (“Great party, but where’s the Communism?”) — analyzed the failures and challenges of the party as it faces a major leadership transition in 2012. Eric X. Li, a venture capitalist in Shanghai and a doctoral candidate at Fudan University’s School of International Relations and Public Affairs, joins the debate.

The Chinese Communist Party has been running the largest country in the world for 62 years. How has it done?


We all know the facts: In 1949 when the Communist Party took over, China had been mired in civil wars and dismembered by foreign aggressions; its people had suffered widespread famine; average life-expectancy was a mere 41 years. Today, it is the second largest economy in the world, a great power with global influence, and its people live in increasing prosperity; average life expectancy has reached 74 years.

But the assessment has to go deeper than that, for reasons none other than the apparent discomfort, if not outright disapproval, Western political and intellectual elites feel toward the Communist Party’s leadership. Five misconceptions dominate the Western media’s discourse on China. These misunderstandings need to be debunked by realities.


China does not hold elections, therefore its rulers do not have the consent of the ruled. According to the Pew Research Center, the Chinese government enjoys popular support that is among the highest in the world. The Chinese people’s satisfaction with the direction of their country was at 87 percent in 2010 and has been consistently above 80 percent in recent years. Sixty-six percent perceive progress in their lives in the last five years. A whopping 74 percent are optimistic about the next five years.

We need to ask: How do most governments produced by elections compare with these numbers? Are elections the only viable way to validate consent and the legitimacy it brings?

China is an authoritarian state in which the party’s political power is concentrated and self-perpetuating. The Communist Party’s Politburo, the highest ruling body, consists of 25 members. Currently, only seven of them come from any background of wealth or power, the so-called princelings. The rest of them, including the president and the prime minister, come from ordinary backgrounds with no special advantages. They worked and competed all the way to the top. In the larger Central Committee, those with privileged backgrounds are even scarcer.

A visit to any top university campus in China would make it obvious to anyone that the Communist Party continues to attract the best and the brightest of the country’s youth. In fact, China’s Communist Party may be one of the most meritocratic and upwardly mobile major political organizations in the world — far more meritocratic than the ruling elites of most Western countries and the vast majority of developing countries. What is wrong with self-perpetuation through merits?

• China’s restriction on freedom of expression stifles innovation. China no doubt restricts freedom of expression, especially political speech. But does that impede innovation in Chinese society?

Some of the most successful IPO’s of Internet companies on the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq have been Chinese startups. Chinese businesses are well on their way to dominating the global alternative-energy industries. Breakthroughs in public policy have taken private home ownership from near zero in 1990 to at least 80 percent today — among the world’s highest, in this relatively still poor country.

The Royal Society in London reports that China’s share of scientific research papers published in recognized international journals went from 4.4 percent in the period between 1999-2003 to 10.2 percent in the period between 2004-2008, now just behind the United States. In 2008, China overtook France as the world’s number three in contemporary art auction revenues. Fifteen out of 35 living artists worldwide who command seven-digit sales for their work are Chinese. If these facts do not demonstrate innovation, what does?

• The Communist Party’s authoritarian rule leads to widespread corruption. No one, not least the party itself, disputes that corruption is a significant problem in China. But does authoritarian rule have anything to do with it?

According to Transparency International, the top 20 cleanest (least corrupt) places worldwide include only four non-Western governments: Singapore, Hong Kong, Qatar and Japan — three of the four are authoritarian regimes; the same three are the only ones that belong to the developing world. By Transparency International’s account, China (78) ranks higher than India (87), Philippines (134), Indonesia (110), Argentina (105) and many more, and tied with Greece (78), barely below Italy (67) — all electoral democracies. Apparently, China’s one-party system is less corrupt than many democratic countries.

China’s success to date is all due to the party’s embrace of capitalism and a market economy. According to the Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal annual ranking of free economies, China ranks 135. Developing countries that rank above China (showing a stronger embrace of capitalism and a market economy) include Haiti, Algeria, Bangladesh, Ivory Coast, Pakistan, Indonesia, the Philippines, Kenya, Rwanda — the list goes on. If market economic reform was the only magic China performed, how come many other countries that have implemented a market economy much earlier and deeper than China have not achieved much economic success? What else has China done?

Hypotheses that do not stand up to facts and yet still dominate people’s consciousness are specious and harmful. It is especially dangerous in this case because one cannot imagine a peaceful world order when the political and intellectual establishment of today’s world powers holds views that are built on falsehoods.
 
Lol what a joke, I am sorry but look CHINA WILL NEVER bring about another company like Google or Microsoft... thats innovation.....


Baidu is stupid mockup of Google, fail china SMFH lol come on .... youtube = youku
^^^^^^^^^
O definetly innovation at its finest....

When has China crated a product that IS THEIRS? please enlighten me...
Do you think China will be able to oust companies like GE, Areva, google, Apple???

What a load of JOKES, 95% of software in china is pirated, a bit of honesty i c, atleast its not 100%...

Huawei has been met with copyright infringments from Motorola and Cisco, go figure... go sell your false , and fake stories else where
 
@ Bengal.Tiger98

Please go easy. Soon there will be barrage of Chinese and Pakistanis mocking us on innovation. Be ready for the onslaught !
 
@ Bengal.Tiger98

Please go easy. Soon there will be barrage of Chinese and Pakistanis mocking us on innovation. Be ready for the onslaught !

That's called taking responsibility for trolling.
 
@ Bengal.Tiger98

Please go easy. Soon there will be barrage of Chinese and Pakistanis mocking us on innovation. Be ready for the onslaught !

well, i can tell u i wouldnt be the one of them, im not interested in these talks.

what Bengal.Tiger98 said is common opinion share with the whole human race, except Chinese, ive seen these talks a billions times, i give up to response.
 
That's called taking responsibility for trolling.

hey crossbow or slingshot w/e ur name is, tell me what ELSE is this forum for besides crticzing the other party and debunking fallacies in their line of thought....

trolling= truth in a form that is highly blunt!!!!!!
 
I would not go into detail but Japanese or Koreans are not known for out of box thinking. They probably can tweak stuff better than anyone and come up with small items here and there but they are not cut out for giant leaps in science and technology. If you think Japan is some kind of benchmark than you are sadly mistaken.
 
Lol what a joke, I am sorry but look CHINA WILL NEVER bring about another company like Google or Microsoft... thats innovation.....


Baidu is stupid mockup of Google, fail china SMFH lol come on .... youtube = youku
^^^^^^^^^
O definetly innovation at its finest....

Here is the Global Innovation Index (2011):

China ranking this year increased by 14 places. And Hong Kong placed in the top five in the world.

Meanwhile, India went in completely the opposite direction.

gblnvdx11.jpg
 
^^^^
Ignore the trolls. Their government still uses hotmail for official business and they now owe Iran $5 billion and can't pay. Pathetic.
 
While it only paints India in poor light, global innovation index is nonsense. Singapore, no kidding! True research happens in universities and government (sometimes private) funded labs. Silly patents don't say much about scientific/technological prowess of a nation. Though I am sure moving from 2.2 ghz clock to 4 ghz is considered "innovation". All Asian countries lag soooooo behind west in pure scientific research.
 
^^^^
Ignore the trolls. Their government still uses hotmail for official business and they now owe Iran $5 billion and can't pay. Pathetic.

Hotmail was quite popular in US, more popular than anywhere else. Still has in many ways. Do you use baidu for search in US?
 

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