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Home » Inside Factories in China, a Struggle to Survive Trump’s Tariffs

Inside Factories in China, a Struggle to Survive Trump’s Tariffs

April 10, 20255 Mins Read Business
Inside Factories in China, a Struggle to Survive Trump’s Tariffs
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As President Trump ratcheted up new tariffs on goods from China to 125 percent this week, the mood in the dusty streets and small factories of southeastern China was a mixture of anger, worry and resolve.

Thousands of export-oriented small factories in or near Guangzhou, the commercial hub of southeastern China, have played a central role in the country’s rapid economic development over the past half century. Quick to supply almost any manufactured product at a low cost, they employ millions of migrant workers from all over China.

Now many of these small factories, cornerstones of the Chinese economy, are confronting difficult times. Clothing factory managers fret about a spate of orders from American customers being canceled at the last minute, saddling them with losses. Managers of factories making machinery wonder whether their low costs will help them survive. And workers hope they will still have jobs in the coming weeks and months.

A few garment factories that mainly supplied the United States market have already closed temporarily as their owners wait for more clarity on tariffs. Managers of many more factories are now hurrying to find buyers in other countries or chase down customers in China.

But China already faced a huge glut of factory capacity even before Mr. Trump began closing the American market this year to many imports from China. Customers elsewhere have demanded ever deeper discounts.

Ruinously low prices for manufacturers have become particularly prevalent in the domestic market in China. Many Chinese consumers are now extremely frugal after losing their life savings in the country’s housing market crash.

“The trade war has a huge impact, because if you can’t export, there will be fewer orders for clothing, and there will be nothing to do,” said Ling Meilan, co-owner of a shirt factory on the second floor of a concrete building in a vast warren of low industrial buildings. Workers hunched over sewing machines on long tables under fluorescent lights.

Ms. Ling focuses on the domestic market in China. But some neighboring factories that sell primarily to the United States have already temporarily suspended operations.

A factory manager down the street who gave only her family name, Yao, said that she mainly supplied Amazon and had already seen a slowing of orders. “If the U.S. tariffs are too high, we can’t do it, and I will definitely switch to other markets,” she said.

The recent cancellations of clothing orders have been particularly hard on small factories in Guangzhou. American importers often pay half the cost of garments upfront and the rest later.

Last-minute cancellations without compensation, by importers who do not want to pay Mr. Trump’s tariffs, have left some factories stuck with considerable inventories of everything from garments to handbags, factory managers said. The 50 percent down payments that they have received are not nearly enough to cover their costs.

Manufacturers of machinery may be somewhat better positioned to endure tariffs. China so utterly dominates some categories that it has few rivals in other countries.

Elon Li, who owns a small Guangzhou factory that makes low-priced cooking equipment for restaurants and backyard barbecuers, said that he did not worry about the latest American tariffs because all of his competitors were also located in or near Guangzhou.

Manufacturers in Japan, South Korea and Europe make equipment for the same tasks, but they use much more expensive materials and charge up to 10 times as much as he does. Factories in Southeast Asia and Africa have been unable to compete because only China makes low-cost electrical components, he said, fetching a waterproof on-off switch from a factory bench as an example.

Steel, his biggest cost, is much cheaper in China than elsewhere, said Mr. Li, who said he changed his English name from Dragon to Elon after reading a book in 2020 about Elon Musk. China’s property market meltdown has decimated construction in China and left a glut of steel.

The retail price of cooking equipment in the United States is up to eight times the cost of making it in China, Mr. Li said. Tariffs are mostly calculated based on the very low manufacturing cost, before it is steeply marked up in the United States. So even a large tariff — Mr. Trump has now added 125 percent tariffs for Chinese goods in less than three months — may not do much to increase the retail price, since manufacturing costs are such a small part of the final price tag, Mr. Li said.

One expense that has not fallen is labor. Managers at five Guangzhou factories all said that they had seen no sign in recent weeks that workers would accept lower wages. A decades-long slide in China’s birthrate has left a national shortage of factory workers, particularly among the young.

Decades of nearly continuous economic growth in China have left many manufacturers with an abiding faith that they will somehow overcome the latest difficulties.

“Our country is truly becoming stronger,” Ms. Ling said. “Personally, I am quite satisfied and have great confidence in China.”

Li You contributed research.

Customs (Tariff) Donald J Factories and Manufacturing Guangzhou (China) International Trade and World Market Trump
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