Dubai Telegraph - China's manufacturing backbone feels Trump trade war pinch

EUR -
AED 4.340505
AFN 77.419545
ALL 96.789542
AMD 446.393417
ANG 2.115686
AOA 1083.797518
ARS 1697.201467
AUD 1.686939
AWG 2.127411
AZN 2.005919
BAM 1.960652
BBD 2.380592
BDT 144.547737
BGN 1.984839
BHD 0.445551
BIF 3502.668658
BMD 1.181895
BND 1.505125
BOB 8.167213
BRL 6.293
BSD 1.181925
BTN 107.05996
BWP 15.647726
BYN 3.395604
BYR 23165.14277
BZD 2.377083
CAD 1.610905
CDF 2635.626237
CHF 0.916798
CLF 0.025822
CLP 1019.5615
CNY 8.200047
CNH 8.19269
COP 4361.287247
CRC 585.947667
CUC 1.181895
CUP 31.320219
CVE 110.538569
CZK 24.21567
DJF 210.470889
DKK 7.467544
DOP 74.594612
DZD 153.564144
EGP 55.393893
ERN 17.728426
ETB 183.743241
FJD 2.611398
FKP 0.872244
GBP 0.868397
GEL 3.185187
GGP 0.872244
GHS 12.989146
GIP 0.872244
GMD 86.27828
GNF 10374.675998
GTQ 9.065436
GYD 247.281991
HKD 9.234282
HNL 31.221269
HRK 7.532454
HTG 154.833192
HUF 377.827617
IDR 19917.177012
ILS 3.683364
IMP 0.872244
INR 106.974452
IQD 1548.331924
IRR 49787.328716
ISK 145.360917
JEP 0.872244
JMD 184.987821
JOD 0.837934
JPY 185.424553
KES 152.469924
KGS 103.356496
KHR 4769.804657
KMF 495.214364
KPW 1063.708187
KRW 1729.679842
KWD 0.363043
KYD 0.984938
KZT 584.784794
LAK 25398.858932
LBP 105847.458942
LKR 365.663423
LRD 222.199916
LSL 19.068191
LTL 3.489829
LVL 0.714916
LYD 7.484523
MAD 10.850554
MDL 20.151873
MGA 5246.985619
MKD 61.642043
MMK 2481.988412
MNT 4232.01646
MOP 9.51144
MRU 46.734662
MUR 54.438059
MVR 18.259996
MWK 2049.472182
MXN 20.472674
MYR 4.665534
MZN 75.345434
NAD 19.068191
NGN 1615.732973
NIO 43.497467
NOK 11.43201
NPR 171.295209
NZD 1.965545
OMR 0.45445
PAB 1.181925
PEN 3.976825
PGK 5.068544
PHP 69.097719
PKR 330.497942
PLN 4.216239
PYG 7809.327087
QAR 4.308135
RON 5.091488
RSD 117.37157
RUB 91.43088
RWF 1725.069326
SAR 4.432463
SBD 9.523886
SCR 16.206001
SDG 710.920662
SEK 10.659499
SGD 1.502649
SHP 0.886727
SLE 28.897229
SLL 24783.74716
SOS 674.268729
SRD 44.696853
STD 24462.841076
STN 24.560785
SVC 10.341594
SYP 13071.256705
SZL 19.064101
THB 37.249195
TJS 11.074708
TMT 4.142542
TND 3.427884
TOP 2.845719
TRY 51.546457
TTD 8.003774
TWD 37.375657
TZS 3043.379955
UAH 50.768605
UGX 4205.407847
USD 1.181895
UYU 45.683641
UZS 14514.104761
VES 446.738744
VND 30670.176269
VUV 141.813247
WST 3.222217
XAF 657.584437
XAG 0.015428
XAU 0.000238
XCD 3.194131
XCG 2.130163
XDR 0.818164
XOF 657.584437
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.757235
ZAR 18.974496
ZMK 10638.472775
ZMW 22.013481
ZWL 380.56972
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • BCC

    1.1300

    90.29

    +1.25%

  • CMSC

    0.0590

    23.609

    +0.25%

  • NGG

    0.7200

    87.61

    +0.82%

  • BTI

    1.0200

    62.98

    +1.62%

  • RIO

    2.1000

    93.22

    +2.25%

  • BCE

    -0.1850

    25.385

    -0.73%

  • AZN

    5.8400

    193

    +3.03%

  • GSK

    0.8050

    59.975

    +1.34%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    16.67

    +0.3%

  • CMSD

    0.0100

    23.9

    +0.04%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • JRI

    0.1000

    12.98

    +0.77%

  • BP

    0.8840

    39.054

    +2.26%

  • RELX

    -0.4950

    29.595

    -1.67%

  • VOD

    0.4100

    15.03

    +2.73%

China's manufacturing backbone feels Trump trade war pinch
China's manufacturing backbone feels Trump trade war pinch / Photo: JADE GAO - AFP

China's manufacturing backbone feels Trump trade war pinch

Sky-high tariffs imposed on China by US President Donald Trump have triggered a slump in factory orders, manufacturers told AFP this week -- with some fearing business may never return.

Text size:

China's vast southern province of Guangdong, crisscrossed with factories making everything from clothing to electronics, has long been the country's biggest manufacturing hub.

For decades, it has churned out products for the insatiable American consumer base, offering low prices few can compete with and serving as a key driver in China's meteoric rise to global economic superpower status.

But Trump's drive to bring manufacturing back to the United States and launch of a brutal trade war with China now threatens to upend that -- adding to the country's already grim economic outlook.

Xiao Junyi, a clothing factory owner in the province's largest city of Guangzhou, told AFP that the US market had accounted for between 20 to 30 percent of orders.

But after the tariffs were announced, "we were genuinely affected," he said.

"Our sales and orders clearly declined."

Many of his factory's products are sold to consumers in the United States via Temu, the low-cost overseas e-commerce platform operated by Chinese retail giant PDD Holdings.

In response to the US tariffs -- now 145 percent for most products and as much as 245 percent on others -- Temu issued a notice saying there will be reduced advertising in the US market going forward, Xiao said.

The 24-year-old factory owner said he was hoping to find other markets for his clothes.

"Aside from the United States, we can do business with the whole world," he said.

But he admitted it was "really unlikely" that other countries would replace the US market.

"The United States is a truly developed country, and the order volume is bigger."

- 'Boundless competition' -

Nearby, businesspeople from across the globe convened for the opening phase of the Canton Fair -- a colossal trade show held every spring and autumn.

The event serves as an opportunity for merchants from around the world to meet face-to-face with Chinese manufacturers and assess their products up close, establishing new supply arrangements or shoring up old contacts.

But buyers from the United States this year were few and far between.

Those that were there declined to comment when asked by AFP which products they were interested in -- or if the tariff war would complicate business.

One Chinese firm keen to make contacts was Wosen Lighting Technology, a supplier to US e-commerce juggernaut Amazon.

"It's a new round in the trade war," Andy Lin, the firm's business development manager, told AFP at one of its factories in nearby Zhongshan.

"It becomes a case where you add tariffs and I also add tariffs -- then it turns into a boundless competition," said Lin.

"This situation won't be able to last long, because after all, it has very real impacts on all countries," she added.

"I think it will especially affect the lives of the American people."

- 'Manufacturing powerhouse' -

The downturn in shipments to the United States could also affect the local manufacturing industry, for which Wosen provides several hundred jobs.

Nevertheless, factories visited by AFP this week in Guangdong were buzzing with activity as workers sat at production lines, the air filled with the clanging and whirring of conveyor belts.

Many manufacturers admitted the heightened trade war with the United States will cause turbulence for businesses.

But they hoped that would encourage them to find new customers in other countries.

The tariffs are also likely to cause pain among American consumers, with US Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell warning this week that they may increase inflation in the country.

As for China's reciprocal tariffs on US goods, Lin said she was not concerned about it affecting her lifestyle -- she is used to buying things on local e-commerce platforms from Chinese manufacturers.

"They can all basically be produced domestically," said Lin.

"After all, China is a manufacturing powerhouse. If you are not looking for certain special products, the impact will be small."

G.Gopalakrishnan--DT