If sea level rise predictions are accurate then much of Bangladesh is going to have frequent flooding problems. Can they engineer their way around the problem while still growing the rest of the economy?
I think labor will move to wherever it is cheapest. If China continues with economic irregularities, then Vietnam, Bangladesh, and other SE Asian nations may see enormous investment.
What IF manufacturing pivoted outside of China? What would that do to the global balance of power?
Vietnam will continue to see investment and has a bright future, but when thinking about China, it's a mistake to place too much emphasis on labor cost. Yes, the cost of labor is important, but it's not the only factor.
Just a few examples of why China will be tough to dethrone:
- China has a much larger pool of labor. It has literally hundreds of millions of potential migrants who can move from rural areas to urban areas to work in factories. This is multiples of Vietnam's entire population.
- Vietnam is not yet anywhere near competitive with China in terms of skilled labor.
- It was comparatively easy for China to develop the Pearl River Delta, which was once primarily agricultural, and turn it into one of the world's most powerful industrial regions because it can produce food in other parts of the country. Vietnam, which is much smaller, doesn't have that luxury with the Mekong Delta. So there's a land limitation in Vietnam.
- The supply chains in China are far more robust and often highly integrated. For example, it's common to find factories located in super close proximity to the suppliers of the raw inputs they need. Sometimes the manufacturers are vertically integrated or have overlapping ownership with suppliers.
- Although Vietnam has invested heavily in improving its infrastructure, China is still many years ahead in terms of roads, rail, deep water ports, etc.
- Foreign companies that manufacture in China have also invested in Chinese manufacturing because it helps them open the door to China's domestic consumer market. The Vietnamese domestic consumer market is much much smaller.
> - China has a much larger pool of labor. It has literally hundreds of millions of potential migrants who can move from rural areas to urban areas to work in factories. This is multiples of Vietnam's entire population.
Believe me, you don't want to hire the people left there in villages, even if they are young, and moderately educated. But in its majority, the labour that still drips from inland China is of lower quality kind. Anguished, tired, middle-aged men who didn't manage to move to the coastal cities during the heydays.
> - It was comparatively easy for China to develop the Pearl River Delta, which was once primarily agricultural, and turn it into one of the world's most powerful industrial regions because it can produce food in other parts of the country. Vietnam, which is much smaller, doesn't have that luxury with the Mekong Delta. So there's a land limitation in Vietnam.
Vietnam makes quite a lot of food, more than China by acreage by far. China is surprisingly agriculturally unproductive country. Take a look on Bangladesh, it has turned a food exporter, despite the truly microscopic size of arable land.
> Believe me, you don't want to hire the people left there in villages, even if they are young, and moderately educated. But in its majority, the labour that still drips from inland China is of lower quality kind.
To knock China off, a country needs quantity, not quality. But even then, once again, Vietnam doesn't have an advantage here. Skilled labor is still very much in short supply in Vietnam.
> Vietnam makes quite a lot of food, more than China by acreage by far. China is surprisingly agriculturally unproductive country.
But that's the point. Vietnam is agriculturally rich and farming is part of the fabric of the Vietnamese culture. The country will not give the Mekong Delta to industry in anywhere near the same way China was able to sacrifice large swaths of historically agricultural land to industry. See again the Pearl River Delta.
I'd personally love to see China replaced but post-COVID, spend some time in Vietnam or Bangladesh and it won't take you long to see that these countries are nowhere near close to mounting a serious challenge. Like I said, Vietnam has a very bright future and will gain, but it's not going to supplant China.
Vietnam is tiny, it's entire industries are said to be less than a single district of Dongguan... but
The lion share of China's light industry sits in the Guandong, and Shenzhen once famously had 50%+ of world's electronics output singlehandedly.
Everything else up north was economically inconsequential until GD became too expensive.
Guandong's population at the time was <100M. So it's well doable for both countries. A giant, giant influence here is where the winds of global capital will blow.
As it's said, Samsung is now 1/3 of Vietnam's GDP, and singlehandedly runs the whole supply chain for all what it makes there, and that is without Samsung group giving any special commitment to Vietnam. Imagine what will it be if Samsung decides to up the states, and move it's heavy industry, and Semi there.
If Foxconn, will decide on moving the "Foxconn city" into Vietnam, and other OEMs of the same size too, just every opportunity opens.
There are more factors to it than just cost of labour.
Skilled assembly line workforce now comes at CNY10000-CNY15000 per month, more than the labour cost in cheaper US states, not to say that employers in USA pay close to nothing besides the salary itself (social security, pension fund, other welfare payments are minimal)
Yet, nobody runs to open factories in USA. Some Chinese companies tried, and everybody seen how it went.
In short: biggest manufacturing MNCs want nothing, but very skilled, educated, and young workforce coming at near no cost, and they bet everything on an all in investment in the country where have it.
Samsung chose Vietnam. Now it is 1/3 of Vietnam's GDP.
For Vietnam there is the risk of the authoritarian single party rule. It works as long as the decisions are wise, but nothing can be done if they are not. I kind of think this is what's happening in China now.