|
Chinese manufacturers attempt to ditch cheap image
By Fan Ling, Yu Zheng
It's
already conducting market testing for its high-end SUVs in the world's
biggest consumer market - the United States, and now Chery, a leading
Chinese automaker, is eying Latin America as the fastest-growing market.
Urban Latin Americans are potential buyers of reliable, but inexpensive
Chery cars.
The Anhui-based Chery and its peers hope to copy the South Korean
miracle of expanding auto sales into every corner of the world. A Chery
senior manager said at the Changchun International Automobile Fair that
his company was planning to launch, with Argentina's SOCMA Group, a
joint venture in Uruguay. Cars are not the only Chinese commodities
flooding Latin America. Guangdong-based home appliance giant Gree
supplied about 2,400 air conditioners for the Pan American Games media
center and athletes quarters in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Some 5,600
athletes and journalists from 42 countries and regions cooled off to
China-made air conditioners.
ZTE Corp., a Chinese telecom supplier, sold 1 million cell phones in the
first half of 2007 in Venezuela and plans to invest in a local cell
phone manufacturing base churning out more ZTE handsets. With relatively
low prices, high quality and technological advantages, including 3G and
other technologies, ZTE has drawn local partners in Brazil, Peru,
Venezuela, Argentina and Colombia. The latest available revenues of ZTE
in Latin America were 400 million U.S. dollars in 2005.
China also has some already recognized brands, such as Haier, the
world's fourth largest electric appliance manufacturer, which has been
promoting innovative high-end refrigerators since April in Latin
America. Haier says it has received orders from dozens of countries.
To
some extent, these quality products have provided a counterbalance to
recent controversies over Chinese exports to the rest of the world. The
"poisonous toothpaste" issue, the Panama medicine issue and the U.S. ban
on marine exports earlier this year aroused distrust of Chinese exports
worldwide. For some, "Made in China" seems to mean "Buyer beware".
Foreign Ministry spokesman Qin Gang has said that China had been very
responsible to ensure the quality and safety of its exports, in
processing, packaging, delivery or sales. The government has striven to
implement laws to supervise and manage the product manufacturers.
More than 99 percent of food exports to the U.S. in the last three years
met U.S. quality standards, higher than the equivalent figure for U.S.
food exports to China, Qin said. "Products with problems are a tiny
minority, those reported by the media cannot blemish all Chinese
exports."
Qin acknowledged the controversial products stemmed from
misunderstanding, unscrupulous vendors at home and abroad, and different
regulations and policies in imports and exports examination between
China and other countries.
Lin Wei, a senior official with the General Administration of Quality
Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine (AQSIQ), says that the government
has focused on food safety problems and increased regulatory oversight
gradually.
The AQSIQ announced on July 11 that toothpastes containing diethylene
glycol (DEG) were banned from import and export. In exceptional cases
that the chemical finds its way into toothpaste with other ingredients,
quantities must not exceed limits set by importing countries or regions.
Toothpaste factories have been banned from using EG as an ingredient.
The AGSIQ says the long-term use of toothpaste in which the DEG content
is less than 15.6 percent would have little adverse effect on the human
body. None of the data suggested that toothpaste containing this
substance had directly led to the harm. statement was intended to
highlight China's efforts in raising industry standards to the levels of
those in other countries.
The Oral Health Supplies Certification and Management Regulation has
been formulated by the State Certification and Accreditation
Administration (CAA) and the Ministry of Health. The CAA is also drawing
up stricter certification and grading procedures for the toothpaste
industry in China in line with the oral health supplies certification
standard of the American Dental Association. No evidence was found to
support any organized violation of product safety standards in China and
the government has taken drastic measures to locate and punish companies
that do break the law. However, voices of doubt abroad may still deter
consumers from treating Chinese goods objectively.
—China Features |