Protection measures introduced by foreign countries and the rise
of production costs are reducing the already thin profit margins
for Guangdong's toy manufacturers.
"We have worries every year. We worried about the short supply
of workers last year and now we are concerned about the foreign
market shrinking due to trade protectionism in many western
countries," Lin Ruorong, owner of a toy factory in the city of
Zhongshan, told China Daily.
His factory manufactures stuffed toys for export to Europe and
the United States.
"The US's toy imports from China have been decreasing over the
past couple of years and the European Union has raised its market
threshold for China's toy products," he said. "That means my
business is hardly able to survive."
Many other toy manufacturers in the province have also been
feeling the pinch.
As well as increased protectionism in the US and the EU, where
most of Guangdong's toys have been exported, Russia, Mexico, Brazil
and Argentina have recently introduced anti-dumping measures
against toy imports from China, citing various excuses, according
to Li Zhuoming, deputy chairman of the Guangdong Toy
Association.
"As Guangdong makes the lion's share of China's toy exports, the
unfavourable export climate will undoubtedly have a very negative
impact on the province's toy industry," Li said.
Official statistics indicate that China supplies over 70 percent
of the world's toys and the province of Guangdong alone makes about
three-quarters of the nation's toy exports.
Li said problems in the export market will force manufacturers
to turn to the domestic market, which will intensify competition on
the mainland.
What was worse, Li said, was that the price rise of raw
materials and the rise in workers' wage will further narrow profit
margins this year.
For example, he said the current price of plastic is 23 percent
higher than a year ago, and wages for toy workers has risen by
about 20 percent in the same period.
It is time for toy makers to spend more on innovation and shift
production to technology-intensive toys to tap into new markets, he
said.
He said that the provincial toy association will organize an
international toy and gift fair in Guangzhou from April 9-11 to
help domestic toy makers. Buyers from new and promising markets
will be invited.
He said that Southeast Asia, with a population of over 500
million, will be one of the target markets.
Li's view is supported by Cai Lidong, vice-general manager of
Guangdong Audley Toy Co Ltd, a well-known toy supplier based in
Shantou, a city in the east of the province.
Cai said he expected the rich variety and competitive prices of
the province's toys would make them popular in these countries.
(China Daily March 16, 2006)