By Dexter Roberts
Workers at Top Form International Ltd.’s newest Cambodia plant are painting a long line of latrines on a December morning. Rows of sewing machines sit idle in a dimly lit warehouse, while next door 150 18-year-old women learn how to sew bras on used Singer Sewing Co. machines.
Chairman Willie Fung has big plans for the factory on Phnom Penh’s outskirts: By the end of 2012, 1,200 workers will produce 80,000 bras a month for sale to the U.S. and Europe. Eventually, this Southeast Asian nation of 14.7 million people could account for one-third of Top Form’s output.
“Cambodia is just like China was 20 years ago. It’s on the verge of a big expansion,” says Fung, a 40-year veteran of the business who may open more factories outside Phnom Penh. Hong Kong-based Top Form, which supplies New York-based Warnaco Group Inc. and Japan’s Wacoal Holdings Corp. (3591), has reduced its China production from 65 percent of total output three years ago to just over 50 percent now. It could drop to just one-third.
Top Form is one of hundreds of textile manufacturers diversifying beyond China, the world’s No. 1 apparel producer, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Jan. 16 issue. Cambodia is one popular destination along with Vietnam, Bangladesh, and Indonesia. Their combined share of exports to rich countries rose to 17.3 percent in 2010 from 12 percent in 2004, according to Clothesource Limited, an Oxford, U.K.-based consulting company.
Lower Wages
The countries all have young people willing to work for less. In Cambodia, that means $76 for a 60-hour workweek. Chinese workers get from $280 in Jiangxi province to $460 in Shenzhen. That’s take-home pay in his factory for 48 hours work, including overtime, says Fung.
While in 2010, China produced 43.6 percent of rich countries’ apparel imports, that number shrank to 36.8 percent in the first half of last year, estimates Clothesource. The stronger yuan, stricter enforcement of environmental rules, and rising wages are pushing production out. “Chinese workers are ever more demanding,” says Willy Lin, chairman of the Hong Kong Textile Assn.
China’s factory wages have risen 18 percent to 20 percent annually over the last three years, while staff turnover is running at 10 percent monthly, estimates the Federation of Hong Kong Industries. On Dec. 30, Shenzhen labor officials announced a 13.6 percent increase in the monthly minimum wage, to 1,500 yuan ($237).
‘Gypsy Factory’
According to the Hong Kong federation, smaller margins mean that one-third of the estimated 60,000 Hong Kong-financed makers of textiles, electronics, and toys in China’s Pearl River Delta will have to shut down or move abroad. “If you are very low- cost, very soon you will have to become a gypsy factory,” says Roy C.P. Chung, the federation’s chairman.
In the past year, Cambodia’s textile industry has taken off. On the outskirts of Phnom Penh, trucks carrying workers from new plants clog highways. Exports by about 300 licensed textile factories grew to $3.3 billion in the first 10 months of last year, up 35 percent, according to the Garment Manufacturers Association in Cambodia. An additional 2,000 to 3,000 textile factories are subcontractors to the licensed plants.
China’s infrastructure and supplier network still beat Cambodia’s handily. In Cambodia, “everything is imported -- even the sewing needles and thread,” says David Tan Kok Ngan, director of Best Tan Garment, a jeans and cargo pants supplier for Inditex SA’s Zara and other brands. Tan says parts take one week by ship from Hong Kong and two weeks from Shanghai. Even Top Form intends to keep making its priciest products in China.
As in China, workers in Cambodia are showing a proclivity to strike. More seriously, other low-cost countries are vying for plants, too. “The challenge is if another country can pay salaries cheaper than Cambodia -- maybe Myanmar,” says Tan. “We don’t know what will happen tomorrow.”
To contact the reporter on this story: Dexter Roberts in Beijing at droberts34@bloomberg.net
To contact the editor responsible for this story: Christopher Power at cpower3@bloomberg.net
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