What I did not comment on yesterday was WHY some manufacturing is moving to Europe from China. Dr Clint Laurent from Global Demographics reports that “Asia is turning into a content of empty nesters” and that “the Chinese labour” market peaked in 2010”. In the coming 10 years he says, “ the workforce will shrink by 40 million”. China “has no spare capacity in terms of labour. Everyone who can work is working”. “Its industrial boom had been helped in part by an influx of people from rural areas…and that resource too had all but run out with most young people having already migrated” to the cities”.
The “current steep rises in labour costs in China are due to the ageing of the population” and are “set to rise as much as 14% p.a.” “Chinese demographic shift is real and is happening now” he says.
“He also says that “the youngest age brackets in India are no longer growing”.
This is one of the reasons that some manufacturing is moving to Europe – ageing of the population and the exhaustion of hitherto cheap labour pools is starving the Chinese economy of lower cost workers. (www.theaustralian.com.au/
business/paulgarvey)
I have long known that the real cost of a skilled IT or science based worker is cheaper in some European countries than it is in China or India. Now that paradigm is being extended to lesser skilled workers. Hence my long standing focus on Berlin as it regains its economic hinterland.
www.millhouse.co