Economy

Is China's economy swinging inland?

By Meng Jing (China Daily)
Updated: 2010-11-05 15:38
Large Medium Small

CHONGQING - Fu Yan, a 19-year-old Sichuan native, began wearing the pink uniform for woman employees at Foxconn Technology Group since the middle of last month.

Unlike some Foxconn employees who had to travel more than 2,000 kilometers to the coastal city of Shenzhen, Foxconn's hub in South China, to join the company, Fu only had to travel 200 km from her hometown in Zizhong, Sichuan province, in Southwest China to land a job packing up products for Foxconn's branch in Chongqing.

"I'd rather work near home. It saves me time and effort to buy transport tickets home for the Spring Festival. And the (salary) payments here are not so bad compared with those in coastal cities," Fu said.

Fu is not the only one who has benefited from a number of companies expanding into the western and central regions of China.

After years of rapid economic development in eastern parts of China and in the nation's coastal cities, more and more young people from western China are staying put and choosing to work near their hometowns instead of leaving their families far behind.

Since China's reform and opening-up in the late 1970s, coastal cities in the east have been leading China's economic development. But as more foreign investment flows in, cities in the western regions of China are now attracting its local people and jobseekers from the east with opportunities and higher wages.

The number of migrant workers in East China was about 90.8 million in 2009, a drop of about 8.9 percent from the previous year. The number of migrant workers in western China increased by 35.8 percent, reaching 29.4 million, according to the National Bureau of Statistics of China.

Fu, the only child in her family, is a prime example of this demographic swing in China's economy. Before joining Foxconn, Fu worked in a toy factory in Foshan, Guangdong province, and earned 2,000 yuan ($298) a month during the summer. She quit after three months because she said the sweltering working conditions in the factory were unbearable.

"They didn't have electric fans in their factories," said Fu. She earns 950 yuan a month during her probationary period for Foxconn Chongqing, but she said it will rise to 1,400 yuan in three months.

"There is not much of a difference between the wages since the cost of living in Chongqing is relatively low. And the two-hour drive from home cannot be bought by money," she said.

Foxconn's three 18-story dormitory buildings in the town of Xiyong in Chongqing - all of which are equipped with safety nets on the second floor as precautionary measures after a series of suicides this year in its Shenzhen factory- are filled with 10,000 local recruits. Men in black uniforms, women in pink, all speak with a similar Sichuan accent.

Apart from Foxconn, Quanta and Inventec, which are large electronic manufacturers, also expanded their factories to Xiyong. Frank Chien, manager of Inventec in Chongqing, said few parents are willing to let their children work far from home due to the family planning policy.

"Most of the labor in China is from the west, which is why this company came to Chongqing," he said.

Is China's economy swinging inland?Netizens give QQ thumbs down
Related readings:
Is China's economy swinging inland? 'Made in China' - but for how long?
Is China's economy swinging inland? Scandal-hit Foxconn sets sights inland
Zeng Hua, a manager of Lianying Rencai, a human resources firm in Chongqing, echoed Chien's sentiment, saying more and more people in the western parts of China are opting to work near home as the region's economy grows.

Zeng said in a job fair organized by his company in mid-October, more than 23 percent of the 10,000 opening positions in Chongqing were filled. "But if it was for jobs in eastern cities, only 18 percent to 20 percent of the positions would be filled," he said.

At the Chongqing Xiyong Micro-electronics Industrial Park, Foxconn, Quanta and Inventec are set to recruit about 250,000 workers once their factories are operational by mid-November, according to the industrial park officials.

"We are expecting more people to come back to the west as the region develops further," Zeng said.