CHINA S GLOBAL COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE

Similar documents
CHINA AND INDIA WHISPER NO MORE

Evangelical Christians on The Infinite Dial. #infinitedial

Facing Myself. by Frank Cost. Professor. Rochester Institute of Technology. Fossil Press Rochester, New York

Event Report China Opportunities in Transition : A Presentation by Jack Perkowski

World Bank Experts Discuss Korea s Rapid Population Aging

ScienceDirect. Technology Transfer and World Competitiveness

Research on the Sustainable Development of Animation Industry Cluster Based on Diamond Model Ke LIU 1,a,*, Xiao-cong DU 2,b

Software Production in Kyrgyzstan: Potential Source of Economic Growth

Module 2: Origin of city in history Lecture 8: The Industrial Revolution and the Rise of the Gesellschaft Part I

infrastructural technology actually going to be shared by many companies, rather

Is manufacturing really dead or are there distinct signs of life? By Esther Chan & Zoe Lai

Radio Usage Trends (1:17) (1:23) (1:37)

Navigating The Fourth Industrial Revolution: Is All Change Good?

Smart Cities. Smart Cities Indicator Survey Highlights

Papermaking from Jute:

Role of Knowledge Economics as a Driving Force in Global World

Preparation. Reading 1

Technovation and Mechatronics

12 Themes of the New Economy

Research on Technological Innovation Capability Evaluation of Guangxi Pharmaceutical Industry

Striving to Make Japan a Nation of Innovation Chairman s Address at the Fiscal 2005 Annual Meeting

The 5 AM Miracle with Jeff Sanders #158: Professional Organization with Mridu Parikh. July 4, 2016

Objectives ECONOMIC GROWTH CHAPTER

China s High-tech Exports: Myth and Reality

A third industrial revolution

Hong Kong as a Knowledge-based Economy

AIPC, Nantes, July The Evolution of Exhibitions

2011/SMEWG33/SEM1/007. Tai-Hwa Pottery. Submitted by: Chinese Taipei

MEDIA COVERAGE WORLD CLASS VENUE

UT i.school. Hideyuki Horii Executive Director of i.school Professor, School of Engineering The University of Tokyo

Introduction to The Source of Innovation in China. In the 1990s China was minor player in the world of science and technology and application of

Vietnam and the Industrial Revolution 4.0: Promoting advantages for rapid and sustainable development

DIGITAL INNOVATION MANUFACTURING EXECUTIVE. The Best Strategy for Reclaiming U.S. Manufacturing Jobs Is...

The greatest online & offline esports competition in Asia. With HGC s full support to esports. MTGamer Glory Cup-Spring Tournament 2018 is returned

CULTURE AND POVERTY ALLEVIATION. Hangzhou, May Bonapas Onguglo, Senior Economic Affairs Officer, UNCTAD

Google SEO Optimization

Does Globalization Force One Best Model? Results from the MIT Globalization Study. Suzanne Berger Discussant: Philippe Riès

FAIRLEIGH DICKINSON UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF THE ARTS FILMMAKING MASTER OF FINE ARTS

Kazakhstan Way of Innovation Clusterization K. Mukhtarova Al-Farabi Kazak National University, Almaty, Kazakhstan

DETROIT: Road to Renaissance A Regeneration Model Presentation to Creative Clusters Conference London, UK November 13, 2007

Earthquake Earthbound 2 Aprilynne Pike

THE PENINSULA ECONOMY

2014 PRODUCTION FORECASTS FOR THE GLOBAL ELECTRONICS AND INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INDUSTRIES

Making Multidisciplinary Practices Work

Presidents Club Finale Concerns... Today, our state, our nation, indeed, the world is going through a period of extraordinary change...

Hong Kong s Future in the New Global Economy

"Made In China 2025 & Internet Plus: The 4th Industrial Revolution" Opportunities for Foreign Invested Enterprises in China

BUILDING THE PEOPLE S STADIUM TOGETHER

Man Of Constant Sorrow: My Life And Times By Eddie Dean, Ralph Stanley READ ONLINE

Domestic Reform and Global Integration: The Evolution of China s Innovation System and Innovation Policies

PCT Yearly Review 2017 Executive Summary. The International Patent System

Casual Games in Asia: Challenges & Opportunities. James Gwertzman Vice President, APAC

ADVANCING KNOWLEDGE. FOR CANADA S FUTURE Enabling excellence, building partnerships, connecting research to canadians SSHRC S STRATEGIC PLAN TO 2020

Is NEPA Ready for the Knowledge-Based Economy? Thursday, May 31, 2018

3.03 Define and distinguish between relations and functions, dependent and independent variables, domain and range.

Myths About Entrepreneurs and Entrepreneurship. Lecture 1, Part I GSL Peru

Evolution of International Business

Industry Academia Government alliance

STAYING AHEAD OF THE CURVE. Aly-Khan Satchu presents at BI Summit

Welcome to the February issue of Communication Directory,

Research about Technological Innovation with Deep Civil-Military Integration

Global/Local innovations for Next Generation Automobiles Miyagi Area Project Report

Six things you should know about the watchmaking industry

The Podcast Consumer. May 2015

Measuring Romania s Creative Economy

The Academy WHAT IS PR?

THE ELECTRONIC COMMERCE CHALLENGE IN CHINA S ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Developments in Satellite Navigation and Wireless Spectrum

How to Make Money Selling On Amazon & Ebay! By Leon Tran

Information Technology and the New Globalization: Asia's economy today and tomorrow. Lawrence J. LAU

Monday, 24 July 2017 Panel Session: 15:30 to 17:00 Venue: WTO (Room S1)

Itunes christmas music radio

The Process of Change: Can We Make a Difference? 2015 SAGE Publications, Inc.

Future of Textile Industry in China. -- DU Yuzhou, Address at 2007 ITMA World Textile Forum (Sept.12, 2007)

HOW THE SEMICONDUCTOR INDUSTRY IS TAKING CHARGE OF ITS TRANSFORMATION

Making Value For America

What we are expecting from this presentation:

[Play Double Stoker ]

Economics (JAN ) General Certificate of Secondary Education January Personal Economics TOTAL. Time allowed 1 hour 15 minutes

Service Science: A Key Driver of 21st Century Prosperity

THE SECRETS OF MARKETING VIA SOCIAL NETWORKING SITES

From disruptive technologies to transformative socio-technical change

CEO Europe Discussion Paper

What the future holds, and what we can do about it? (I wish I knew!!) Professor Martin Loomes Dean of Science and Technology Middlesex University

ipad Total Cost of Ownership: the Cost Savings and of a Mid-Year Refresh

McKinsey Global Institute. May Trading myths: Addressing misconceptions about trade, jobs, and competitiveness

Driving profitable growth in Greater China. Andy Ho Chief Market Leader Greater China

Planning Activity. Theme 1

"Financing for Your Startup You Got to Tell a Story

Development Research on Internet Cultural Industry in Hebei Province under the Network Technology. Xuguang Yang

A Regional University-Industry Cooperation Research Based on Patent Data Analysis

Growing a UX Career. An HFI White Paper. A Conversation with Eric Schaffer CEO and Founder Human Factors International

Cognizanti. Illuminating the Digital Journey Ahead. The First Word. An annual journal produced by Cognizant VOLUME 10 ISSUE

Do It Yourself Guide to DIY Video


TIPLO News FEBRUARY 2018 (E219)

DFS UNFOLDS DRAMATIC NEW FALL/WINTER 2013 CAMPAIGN

A (Very) Brief History

You are the first resource of your business and its biggest obstacle. You are the common denominator in every decision you make for your business.

CPE/CSC 580: Intelligent Agents

Transcription:

CHINA S GLOBAL COMPETITIVE ADVANTAGE The beginning of the end, or the By Bill Fischer - July 2010 IMD Chemin de Bellerive 23 PO Box 915, CH-1001 Lausanne Switzerland Tel: +41 21 618 01 11 Fax: +41 21 618 07 07 info@imd.ch http://www.imd.ch

For three decades, China has grown into a world economic presence, if not powerhouse slowly, at first, and now full-fledged in an unprecedented, consistent, monotonic, success story. It is, to be sure, an extraordinary achievement but it s also time for a change! We are at a major transition point in the China growth story. In fact, I am reminded of the metaphor of shifting gears in a moving vehicle in order to adjust to a change in the road conditions. Now is the time that the traditional engine of China s growth requires a shifting of gears. Let s be sure that we understand what is happening on the path to continued Chinese growth and why it matters. If we are sober and honest, China s wildly successful [re-] debut onto the world economic stage over the past three decades has been all about cheaper labor and lower costs. No doubt there is an extraordinarily attractive domestic market as well, but China s real advantage in the global economy has been low-wage manufacturing labor. It has not been innovation! It has not been services! It has been single-focused on the advantages of making existing products cheaper full stop! If we follow Deng Xiaoping s admonition to learn truth from facts, we can answer a series of probing questions with the same response. Has there been a Chinese enterprise which has created a noteworthy new product innovation, such as Xerox s PARC personal computer, Kodak s digital camera, Boeing s 747, Philips CD or Sony s walkman? Has China ever come up with a process innovation as noteworthy as Toyota s production system or IKEA s shoppingmaze design? Or how about an internet offering as noteworthy as Amazon or Facebook? A business model innovation à la itunes rewiring of the customer listening experience, or Zara s reinvention of the frequency of fashion offerings, or ebay s community of members? The answer to all these questions is no. In truth, China s growth has been powered by not by doing things anything differently but by doing existing things less expensively and that takes cheap labor. IMD - www.imd.ch The beginning of the end, or the Page 2/5

And why is now a critical juncture? 2010 is the year in which China s working age population has reached its highest level. This year, 71.9% of the Chinese population is between the ages of 15 to 64 which has been depicted by statisticians as the ages at which people make a netpositive contribution to economic value-creation. After this year, that proportion of the population will decline and after 2015 the actual number of Chinese working-age people (15-64) will also begin to decline. As long-time China watcher Philip Bowring recently observed in The International Herald Tribune: For China as a whole there are currently only 106 million workers in the 15-19 age group compared with 122 million in the 20-24 group. China now has 378 million in their 40s and 50s but only 273 million under 20. The decline, which is continuing, in the number of the young and mobile has been greatest in rural areas. So China will have to find other ways of sustaining economic growth and gains in worker productivity. 1 The obvious way for that to happen is through innovation, but here we have no reason to argue why the past (no innovation) will suddenly change. The conundrum underlying all of this is that you will find a great amount of creativity in China today. From the art scene, fashion, sculpture, music and cinema, China is awash with creativity. But, if you look closely, you will notice that this is individual innovation, not organizational innovation. What sets the ebays and Amazons and Apples apart is that they are all examples of organizational innovation. The ipod, iphone and ipad experiences could not have been designed by one person; it needed a team, and a diverse team at that. Same is true behind most of the big innovations of recent times. Yet, what is it about Chinese organizations that they turn out to be so much less innovative than the sum of the people who are brought together under that organizational structure? Is it IMD - www.imd.ch The beginning of the end, or the Page 3/5

that the command and control approach to management which has characterized thousands of years of Chinese history is still hard to break? Or, is it Confucian respect for hierarchy and relational prerogatives? Is it not enough trust or too much trust? Is it not enough diversity? Or is it something else? These are such relevant questions in such a critical location that IMD will be sending me to Hong Kong later this year to run a program for leading executives in the region faced with the task of achieving more effective innovation. This is China s time to address the innovation issue so that its prior successes represent the end of the beginning a period of time when China will move from being the factory of the world into a world-class innovator. If this does not happen, then we are likely looking at the beginning of the end of China s distinctive competitive advantage and a movement into a time when China is just another low-wage producer, bigger than most, but no longer either the biggest or the lowest priced. Bill Fischer is Professor of Technology Management at IMD. He directs IMD s Mastering Innovation Globally program which will take place in Hong Kong from October 25-27, 2010. 1 Bowring, Philip. China s Dwindling Resource. International Herald Tribune, June 3, 2010 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/04/opinion/04iht-edbowring.html IMD - www.imd.ch The beginning of the end, or the Page 4/5

RELATED PROGRAMS ORCHESTRATING WINNING PERFORMANCE - http://www.imd.ch/owp The global business program for individuals and teams Program Directors Bettina Buechel and Seán Meehan - For individuals and teams who seek the latest management thinking and practical, innovative solutions for their business - Anticipate global business trends - Boost your performance, broaden your perspectives and expand your global network - Design the program that suits you MASTERING INNOVATION GLOBALLY - http://www.imd.ch/mig Crafting and implementing innovative practices Program Director Ben Bryant - Understand what it takes to create a global, innovative corporate culture - Appreciate and develop the leadership requirements to succeed in innovation - Learn how to master innovation best practices IMD - www.imd.ch The beginning of the end, or the Page 5/5