The world's largest market for consumer goods is anxious to lure business and create jobs. The world's largest producer of such goods is concerned about rising manufacturing costs at home, growing US frustration with a flood of imports that undercut domestic producers - and wants to establish itself as a global economic power. It's a match.
Ironies abound. Some of the states with the most determined initiatives to lure foreign-owned businesses are those, like Alabama, that also have the harshest anti-immigration laws. As Daimler-Benz discovered when one the German executives assigned to its Mercedes manufacturing plant there was arrested for not carrying proper documentation. But hey, money talks, the occasional slip up notwithstanding.
Research suggests that many of the Chinese companies relocating operations to the US are concerned about the financial impact of anti-dumping laws. Which means the laws are having an effect. However, it is not clear that encouraging Chinese companies to locate in the US, thus making US companies even less competitive was the intended effect. But at this point, we'll take what we can get. JL
Parija Kavilanz reports in CNNMoney:
Chinese conglomerates, on a mission to expand their global footprint and avoid "anti-dumping" tariffs, are shifting more of their production to America.
In the United States, cash-strapped states desperate for revenue and jobs, are rolling out the welcome mat for foreign companies that can guarantee both.
More Chinese manufacturers have been launching their own U.S. facilities in the last five years, said Thilo Hanemann, research director at Rhodium Group, a New York-based economic advisory group.
The biggest investments are being made by Chinese firms with products that have been slapped with hefty anti-dumping tariffs, he said.
The United States imposes these financial penalties on imported products that it believes are being sold cheaper than the cost it takes to produce them. Dumping creates an unfair advantage in the marketplace, according to the Department of Commerce.
Alabama's sweet manufacturing boom
In recent years, the agency has imposed these fines on solar technology and heavy industrial products from China, including steel pipes, copper tubing and aluminum extrusions.
Xinxiang, China-based Golden Dragon Precise Copper Tube Group, Inc., the world's largest producer of copper tubing used in air conditioning, refrigeration and autos, broke ground last month on a $100 million plant in Thomasville, Ala.
It's the first Chinese owned-and-operated plant to enter the state. The 400,000-square-foot facility is expected to create 300 American jobs when it's up and running in 2014.
Golden Dragon filed for an IPO in China last month and is in a quiet period. It declined to comment for the story.
Raymond Cheng, CEO of Hong Kong-based consulting firm SoZo Group, helped coordinate the deal for Golden Dragon and is working with 30 large Chinese manufacturers that want a presence in the United States.
"For many of these companies, their biggest customers are in the United States," Cheng said. "It's a tactical advantage to be next door to your biggest client."
Opening up a plant in the United States allows Chinese producers to save on transportation and fuel costs. For instance, Golden Dragon's Alabama facility will be right next door to its largest customer Goodman Manufacturing in Houston, said Cheng.
Half of the 30 companies Cheng's working with also cited anti-dumping duties as a catalyst for coming to America. They can avoid these fines if they manufacture the products in the United States.
Golden Dragon will still have to pay the penalties until its Alabama plant is operational in 2014.
Until then, Alabama is offering special tax credits to companies to offset their anti-dumping duties.
"[It] gives Alabama a leg up against other states in attracting big businesses," said Linda Swann, Alabama assistant secretary of commerce.
Daniel Rosen, a China expert and partner with Rhodium Group, said Chinese investments in the United States can create domestic jobs and spur economic growth.
"There is precedent for this," he said. "Japanese companies came here in the 1980s for the same reasons, including finding a way around anti-dumping duties."
States to manufacturers: We want you ASAP!
"There was skepticism when they came," said Rosen. "But today, there are more than 700,000 Americans working for Japanese affiliates in the United States," he said.
Mark Stevens, a partner with manufacturing consulting firm Wipfli, is working with six Chinese manufacturers that are scouting for factory locations in the United States.
He agreed with Cheng about why his clients are eager to come to America.
"The U.S. is an untapped market," he said. "If they want to play here, they have to be here."
Nanshan America, a subsidiary of China's Nanshan Group, is aiming to have its first U.S. plant in Lafayette, Ind., open for business in July.
The 600,000-square-foot-plant will make aluminum components -- a category that faces anti-dumping fines. The facility expects to create as many as 200 local jobs by 2013, said Nanshan America president Lijun Du.
The company picked Indiana because 60% of its market is in the Midwest. Du said avoiding tariffs was also a factor in the company's decision to come to the state.
"When the U.S. imposed those fines in 2010, 95% of exports from China of aluminum extrusion products stopped," he said. Nanshan wasn't a big exporter to the United States at the time.
Said Cheng, "It is a natural evolution that as Chinese companies grow into global brands, they will come to the U.S., the largest consumer market in the world."
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