男女羞羞视频在线观看,国产精品黄色免费,麻豆91在线视频,美女被羞羞免费软件下载,国产的一级片,亚洲熟色妇,天天操夜夜摸,一区二区三区在线电影

Made in China, loved everywhere

Updated: 2011-08-05 17:23

By William Daniel Garst (China Daily)

  Comments() Print Mail Large Medium  Small 分享按鈕 0

Made in China, loved everywhere

Product placement has long been ubiquitous in Hollywood movies. Everyone who watched the 1981 blockbuster E.T. remembers ET croaking out "Reese's pieces" while happily munching down the trail Elliot has left for him. In his later film, The Lost World: Jurassic Park, Steven Spielberg made sure to include the Mercedes Benz logo in the close up shots of the SUV that Jeff Goldblum and his team use to explore the park.

But the latest Transformers movie, Transformers 3: The Dark Side of the Moon, which opened in China in late July, breaks new ground in the product placement department by featuring four famous Chinese brands.

A TCL flatscreen TV makes a brief appearance in the film, while the spiky haired robot, Brains, transforms itself out of a Lenovo Edge Computer. The protagonist of the film, Sam, sports a T-shirt from Meters/Bonwe, a mid-level Chinese retailer with a large follower among hip, younger clothes buyers in China. And in one scene, a scientist says he needs to quickly finish his Yili Shuhua low-lactose milk first.

This development underscores how China is once again reinventing itself economically. The latest makeover involves moving from producing cheap clothing and toys to higher-end products. Companies like Lenovo, which lobbied hard for product placement in Transformers 3, are determined to compete globally on the basis of quality and brand name recognition.

Data on the Chinese economy clearly point to this shift in its manufacturing mix. According to a report, authored by Will Freeman of GaveKal Research in Beijing, the share of high-tech products in China's exports has risen from 19 percent in 2000 to 25 percent in 2009.

In the past, these high-tech exports consisted of products whose components, like computer motherboards, were made elsewhere, in South Korea and Japan, for example, to be assembled in China. That is no longer the case, for Suzhou has become a key production base for sophisticated X-ray printers and network routers and switches.

The GaveKal report shows that China's rapid emergence as an exporter of capital equipment, as opposed to primary and light manufactured goods. In fact, during the past decade, China's share of global exports of capital equipment has quadrupled, from 2 to 8 percent.

Finally, China is emerging as the new global renewable energy giant, too. In 2009, for example, it overtook the United States as the world's largest market for wind turbines, while State-owned power plants are competing to see who can build solar plants the fastest.

Indeed, Chinese wind turbine producers have now gone global in their sales efforts. A report in The New York Times, published in Nov 15, 2010, said Sinovel, a Beijing-based State-owned turbine producer, signed a contract with the Massachusetts Water Authority last year to build a 1.5-megawatt wind turbine.

The turbine will provide electricity for a wastewater pumping station in the Boston suburb of Charleston. The report also said that China's fifth largest wind turbine producer, Ming Yang Power Group, has set up a sales office in Dallas, Texas.

The Chinese government has long supported renewable energy through its "863 Program". Now, the 12th Five-Year Plan (2011-2015) calls for doing the same for higher-end capital equipment.

This trend will naturally raise new fears about Chinese economic competition in the US and Europe. But while some businesses in the West will undoubtedly be squeezed, the GaveKal report says that others will benefit from having access to lower cost capital equipment to boost their productivity. As Freeman was quoted as having said in a July 23 article in Toronto-based The Globe and Mail: "The story of Chinese export deflation is far from over."

Moreover, within China, the move to higher-end manufacturing will boost Chinese wages, thereby expanding the global consumption pie both for Chinese and Western companies.

In any case, China has no choice but to transform itself into a manufacturing power, because its low-wage cost advantage is being rapidly eroded. According to the Asia-focused investment and advisory company Intercedent, rising wages and the expected revaluation of the yuan means that mid-tier manufacturing wages in China will be equal to minimum wage levels in the US by 2017.

Once that happens, the production of cheap clothing, footwear and apparel will be repatriated back to developed countries or shift to newly emerging economies like Vietnam and Bangladesh, enabling the latter to develop more rapidly.

Thus the latest stage in China's rapid economic rise is surely a win-win for the aggregate world economy. And with the US becoming less and less governable by the day and Europe trapped in a common currency that it can neither retreat from nor manage effectively, the world economy needs a new leader and growth engine.

So expect to see more and more made-in-China products on movie screens.

The author is an American corporate trainer in China.

主站蜘蛛池模板: 卓资县| 营口市| 建水县| 涟源市| 和林格尔县| 云林县| 镇远县| 中江县| 将乐县| 若尔盖县| 多伦县| 登封市| 县级市| 铁力市| 泸水县| 巴马| 湟源县| 五常市| 婺源县| 同江市| 农安县| 普安县| 安平县| 阿坝| 侯马市| 峡江县| 伊金霍洛旗| 庆云县| 同心县| 云安县| 汕尾市| 阳春市| 衡山县| 元谋县| 三台县| 长汀县| 枞阳县| 麻城市| 延川县| 慈溪市| 竹溪县| 聂荣县| 宁远县| 怀来县| 内江市| 永春县| 鄂伦春自治旗| 阳高县| 许昌县| 南陵县| 雅安市| 色达县| 岳普湖县| 宁河县| 左贡县| 班戈县| 珠海市| 绥芬河市| 陕西省| 登封市| 临高县| 德州市| 新竹县| 固镇县| 重庆市| 浑源县| 泗阳县| 浦城县| 汤阴县| 尤溪县| 崇礼县| 洛隆县| 凤山县| 肥东县| 深水埗区| 广河县| 新化县| 静海县| 长海县| 虞城县| 班戈县| 乌恰县|