Seldom have accusations of foreign dumping caused such widespread complaints
among plastic processors as the influx of low-priced grocery bags from China.
Domestic producers are smarting from the invasion of Chinese and Southeast Asian
bags that started five years ago and has grown over 14% a year ever since. They
now account for a third of all polyethylene retail bags sold here.
Domestic bag makers supplied 59.6 billion bags in 2002—just 62% of U.S.
consumption. That was down from 80% two years before, according to an official
complaint filed this year by five of the largest North American film and bag
producers. The group petitioned the U.S. Commerce Dept. and International Trade
Commission, alleging that U.S. producers are being harmed by sales at less than
fair value—known as dumping—of retail bags from China, Malaysia, and
Thailand.
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Labor is so cheap and plentiful in China that plants like Shanghai Huayue have
workers inspect each and every bag before it is packed.
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U.S. manufacturers say that bags from these countries typically sell here for
33% to 50% less than U.S.-made bags and only pennies above the U.S. price of
polyethylene. Brokers for Chinese bags say the price difference is more like
10% to 15%. The petitioners claim to have evidence of dumping margins of 67%
to 122% on retail bags from China.
Its causing significant layoffs and plant closures, says William
Swinimer, chairman and CEO of PCL Packaging Inc. in Barrie, Ont., a party to
the complaint. So far, the Commerce Dept. and ITC agree, at least enough to
continue their investigation, which could take as long as a year.
Ironically, several of the big U.S. companies supporting the complaint against
China actually import Chinese bags themselves. At least one has sister companies
with substantial investments in Chinese bag-making plants.
Chinese bags are typically of higher quality than U.S.-made ones, points out
Allen Golbert, executive v.p. of Spectrum Plastics, Cerritos, Calif. His firm
makes bags here and also imports them from China but is not a party to the complaint.
Other U.S. manufacturers reply that Chinese quality is no better than that of
U.S. bags.
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Draw strings are hand inserted into garbage bags, and as many as four people
may be employed to put grommets in one department-store bag.
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What makes Chinese bags so inexpensive? Parties to the complaints assert that
it is because the Chinese government supports plant construction costs and gives
rebates to processors based on the jobs they create. There is evidence of that,
but perhaps not much more than what regional development offices do anywhere
in the world to spur local employment. For example, regional development offices
in the U.S. offer incentives that may include tax exemptions, installing a free
rail line, or offering free water or electricity.
The complaint is ludicrous, says Spectrums Golbert. The
Chinese need to put people to work, so the government encourages hand work.
In some places, workers there actually punch out T-shirt bag handles by hand.
Chinese bag makers are making a small profit. If they didnt, theyd
be out of business.
Arthur Zhu, sales director of Sunway Polypak Hong Kong Ltd. in Shanghai, which
exports bags to Europe and the U.S., adds that bag makers are very small businesses
in China, so theres no government support in China at all.
However, there are allegations here that the Chinese government does support
exports by keeping its currency undervalued by as much as 40% relative to the
dollar.
Inverted business model
To understand the differences between Chinese and U.S. bag-making operations,
we interviewed exporters and agents for Chinese and other Asian-sourced bags
and visited seven film and bag makers in the Shanghai area. Most of the companies
visited export a majority of their production to the U.S.
The model for Chinese bag making is in many ways diametrically opposed to the
U.S. model. The biggest U.S. bag makers run large film bubbles at the highest
rate possible to spread high fixed costs of plant and machinery over the most
bags. In China its the reverse, explains Sunways Zhu. They run small
bubbles very slowly and carefully. They do so in order to maintain thinner gauges.
They dont need high output because fixed costs are low. Plants are very
inexpensive to build. Extruders are small and low cost. A 45- to 55-mm Chinese
extruder costs only around $10,000. Theres also much less upstream and
downstream equipment than in a U.S. plant.
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Chinese bag-film lines typically extrude small bubbles only one bag wide. They extrude slowly and carefully to make thinner film and get more bags per pound of resin.
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Extruders in China are almost invariably simple and locally built with no computer
controls or electronic monitoring. The three biggest makers of blown film machines
in China are all former state enterprises. Dalian Plastic & Rubber Machinery
Co. in Dalian and Hubei Light Industry Machinery Co. in Wuhan both use technology
licensed from Reifenhauser GmbH in Germany. Shandong Laiwu Plastic Machinery
in Laiwu City in Shandong province uses technology licensed from Placo in Japan.
Because extruders in China typically make tubes only one bag wide, it takes
only a bottom seal to form the bag. This eliminates downstream equipment for
slitting and sealing of wider webs. Single webs also use much smaller printers.
Color printing in China is done slowly and carefully with greater accuracy than
in the U.S., according to brokers of Chinese bags.
A whole Chinese plant costs less than the spare-parts bill for a U.S.
plant, says Sunways Zhu. A Chinese processors biggest
cost is resin. Thats why gauge control is so important. He estimates
resin is 75% of the cost of unprinted bags. Resin is a much smaller proportion
of total cost in North American bag manufacture—50% to 60%, U.S. bag makers
estimate.
Sunways grocery bags are 0.50 mil thick with ±3% variation, while
U.S. grocery bags are typically 0.51 to 0.56 mil with ±5% to 10% variation.
Sunways bags come from three plants in Hong Kong, Shanghai, and Shandong
province. Together these plants produce 13 million lb/yr of PE bags, which Sunway
says will soon rise to 22 million lb.
Energy costs in China arent noticeably different from those in the U.S.
Electricity in the Shanghai area costs the equivalent of 9¢/kwh during
the day and 3¢/kwh between midnight and 6:00 a.m.
Small but growing fast
Chinese bag makers are nearly all less than 10 years old, since they were started
after 1993 when the Chinese government began to encourage private business ownership.
There are only a few large bag makers in China. One exception, noted in the
U.S. bag makers complaint, is Macau-based Fabrica de Artigos De Plastico
Chung Va Ltd., which owns three large plants with combined capacity of over
12 million lb a month of bags.
Most Chinese plants arent anywhere near as big. Three hundred to
400 tons a month is a small business in America, but in China its a big
business, notes Sunways Zhu. Rain Continent Shanghai Co. has a plant
in Pudong with 20 extruders that make only 11 million lb/yr of T-shirt bags.
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Jonathan Fan and Arthur Zhu of Sunway Polypak develop bags for domestic Chinese markets as well as export to Europe and the U.S. Exports are growing faster.
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Zhen Lu, owner of Rain Continent, was a high school science teacher before starting
his own business 10 years ago. The factory makes small single-bag bubbles, except
for one larger line with a 2.2-meter (7.2-ft) layflat. The firm just opened
a 459,000-sq-ft plant near Shanghai with 100 extruders, which will produce 22
million lb/yr of T-shirt bags—all for export, mostly to the U.S. He also
owns a trading company in Shanghai that exports bags.
Most Chinese bag makers are still small mom-and-pop family businesses with at
most 10 to 15 extruders. To meet big orders, they pool business with other small
firms. Shanghai Huayue Packaging Products Co. in Shanghai, for example, has
16 extruders and makes 11 million lb/yr of bags. Five minutes away is Hua Huang
Co., a T-shirt bag company belonging to the brother of Huayues owner.
The two companies share orders to keep both busy.
Huayue owner Wehua Wang has only a middle school education, but he worked for
a big state-owned plastics company before the era of economic liberalization.
He started eight years ago with only two blown film lines, now has 16, and is
building a second plant that will have the companys first three-layer
line. Up to now, Huayues extruders were all made by Guang Da Co., a machine
builder in Zhe Jiang province. However, the three-layer line will come from
Taiwan.
Huayue makes bags for a large U.S. chain of hospitals and clinics as well as
department-store bags for the U.S. and Europe, T-shirt bags for Japan, and zipper
bags for the Chinese market. Huayue made T-shirt bags for the U.S. market for
about six months but stopped because its a terrible business in
the U.S., notes export manager Daniel Chai.
Huayue initially didnt intend to export its bags, but it had trouble collecting
bills from its domestic Chinese customers. Five years ago, Chai attended a trade
fair in Shanghai and made the companys first export contacts. Two years
ago, Huayue got ISO 9002 certification, and now 80% of its bags are shipped
overseas.
Lianbin, one of the bigger Chinese bag producers, currently exports only 20%
of its production. But the firm expects that share to grow to 50% in a few years.
Internet auctions by U.S. retailers like Target Corp. that allow suppliers to
bid for jobs electronically have given Chinese firms easier access to U.S. customers.
Chinese companies are growing with the help of investments from their overseas
customers. One company that has invested in eight Chinese bag firms is itself
a U.S. bag maker and importer. (It didnt want its name used in this story.)
Making resin go farther
Polyethylene resin is less expensive in China most of the time, since China
is a spot market. Resin comes primarily from Saudi Arabia, and the rest from
Korea, Japan, and North America. Prices are typically well below the prices
here. U.S. resin companies participate in this activity, often called reverse
dumping, because theyre paid immediately in the spot market instead of
having to wait several weeks for big domestic buyers to settle contracts.
Imported resin in China is less expensive than Chinese-made resin and is of
better quality. It also comes with a built-in tax incentive to export finished
goods: Chinese bag producers pay no import duty on resin as long as the resin
leaves China again in the form of bags. If the bags are sold on the domestic
Chinese market, the duty has to be paid. Domestic sales also require the seller
to pay for shipping. In a country as vast as China, that handicap makes domestic
sales less attractive than exports, producers say.
Lower resin prices in China are offset by much higher handling costs. Imported
resin comes in 25-kg bags, which have to be opened and dumped by hand. Resins
are hand weighed and mixed. Hoppers are hand loaded. Sunways Zhu estimates
that no more than 1% of bag-making film lines in China are fed automatically
with gravimetric hoppers.
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Technical sophistication is increasing. Chinese bag maker J&J has modified its process to run much faster than is usual in China.
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Chinese bag makers seek a profit by squeezing as many bags as possible out of
a pound of resin. Chinese companies keep bag weight down by running their film
lines slowly. U.S. bag makers have no incentive to do so, notes Sunways
Zhu. For example, he says, To slow lines down enough to go from a 10-micron
bag to a 5-micron bag makes no sense in the U.S. because the total labor and
overhead cost per ton would increase 100%. Chinese processors have made
big headway in niche markets like department store and convenience store bags,
where thinner gauges are becoming accepted. In niche markets the savings
of going thinner are huge, says Zhu. For every ton of resin, you
make twice as many bags.
Some U.S. producers allege that Asian bag prices are so low because some bag
makers and brokers are cutting corners. Says Alfred Teo, chairman and CEO of
Sigma Plastics in Lyndhurst, N.J., The bags are sometimes thinner than
specified or have short counts. I have a box sitting right in my office with
900 bags in it that says it holds 1000. Nobody here checks them, and they get
away with it.
Plentiful hand labor
In Shanghai, one of the highest paying areas of China, the minimum wage is the
equivalent of about $80 a month. In the provinces, the minimum might be as low
as $29 a month. A worker in Shanghai gets paid in a week what a U.S. worker
gets in an hour. In remote provinces, the Chinese worker gets in a month what
the American worker gets in a couple of hours, says an executive of a
large U.S. bag maker that is protesting the Chinese bag imports.
Chinese manufacturers use labor in ways that are impossible to compare with
U.S. practice—like having four people put grommets in one department-store
bag, or inspecting each bag by hand before it is packed.
At Huayue, 18- to 20-year-old girls inspect individual zipper bags before packing
them for export to the U.S. The company employs 220 workers to produce 11 million
lb/yr of bags. Rain Continent employs 100 workers for the same output. Shanghai
J&J Packaging Material Co. in Shanghai employs only 30, plus 30 seasonal
workers, for about the same output.
Sigmas Teo, however, says the cost difference reflects more than lower
wages. He notes that Chinese firms dont have to bear the high costs of
meeting the same environmental, safety, and healthcare standards as U.S. companies
do. Teo says Sigma had to close a Kentucky plant and lay off 200 workers because
of this unfair competition.
Moving to a higher level
Chinas low-cost manufacturing is evolving toward greater technical sophistication.
For example, while bag drawstrings are still usually inserted by hand in China,
Huayue makes hospital bags with automatic drawstring-insertion machines. As
plants like this move toward more automated equipment, they are seeking workers
with more than the statutory minimum of nine years of schooling. Rain Continent,
for instance, is working toward ISO 9002 certification for its new plant and
is trying to recruit workers with a high-school education.
In China, its a very good time. There are so many opportunities,
says Huayues Chai. We have to improve the general standard. If we
focus on low-cost products, we have no future.
The trend toward technological sophistication is evident at some smaller firms
like Shanghai J&J, which runs five small film extruders. Owner Thomas Teo
is an engineer who started his own company to make handled bags and grocery
sacks. He exports mostly to the U.S., though some bags go to Europe.
Teo, who is also chief engineer and plant manager, modified his machines and
process to run faster than most other Chinese bag makers. Teo produces 10 million
lb/yr of bags with one-third as many machines as Huayue has of the same size.
One of his modifications is a higher tower that provides more cooling at faster
line speeds. Heat lamps speed the drying of printing ink to keep up with the
extruder. After printing, Teos process reinflates the bubble with air,
an unusual step that he says allows better control for faster winding.
J&Js staffing is also lean by Chinese standards. It has only 30 permanent
and 30 seasonal employees. Teo himself often sleeps at his factory, which runs
24/7 except on Chinese New Year.