In Vietnam and China, Manufacturing Is Changing

The next industrial revolution will be in Vietnam.

Subscriber: Log Out

I had an opportunity to assess four shoe manufacturing sites in Asia in May. Two were in Vietnam and two were in China. I was evaluating quality issues at all of these sites on behalf of my consulting client. Although I have been to China many times and have seen dozens of factories, this was my first trip to Vietnam.

I was truly astonished by the sheer magnitude of motorcycles in Ho Chi Minh City, reminding me of swarms of honey bees around a hive. They were everywhere and yet, traffic seemed to flow effortlessly through chaotic intersections with no stop lights. “You have to just keep moving forward,” my driver told me. “It's the only way to get around in Vietnam. You cannot stop or hesitate,” he said. I was very glad my client had hired an experienced driver and car for me.

I felt a bit of the same beehive effect inside the Vietnam shoe factories. Everything was continuously and consistently moving forward… the gluing stations, the stitching lines, the heat treat, the finishing lines and the lacing stations. It was a frenzy of activity in some of the largest factories I have ever seen. Shoemaking processes are still very manual with little automation, in some cases with 200 individual steps in the process. The pace is quick and unrelenting.

The workers in these Vietnamese factories are paid $200 per month, plus they have an opportunity to earn a 10% ($20) production bonus if they meet or exceed production quotas and quality standards. Working in non-air conditioned facilities, with high temperatures and humidity, these workers (mostly young girls) were heads-down for a full 8-10 hours per day. But I also learned that Vietnamese workers prefer not to work overtime. They are locals and go home at night to their families. They don't want to work on the weekends.

Comparing Vietnamese factories with the factories in China, the differences were quite remarkable. In Guangzhou, Dongguan and Shenzhen, Chinese workers are paid about 30% more than in Vietnam, plus they often work overtime hours. Weekend work is generally expected, especially during peak production times. Chinese workers are mostly migrants from the interior of China, coming to these factory towns to work a few years before returning home with their savings. They live in factory dormitories, are fed three meals a day, and work overtime to earn more. They are also more productive and are capable of working on more complicated processes. But these workers are also becoming global millennials.

As I wrote in my Chinese Millennials blog, young Chinese workers have started to exhibit millennial behaviors akin to American millennials. They talk about the quality of their lives. They want all kinds of consumer products like the latest mobile phone and branded clothing. They will quit their jobs for higher wages at another factory. The Chinese worker that we have become accustomed to reading about and seeing in factory photos, is changing.

Chinese manufacturing is maturing and low-cost, labor-intensive work is moving to other low cost countries like Vietnam, Myanmar and Indonesia while China takes on more advanced manufacturing. What we are seeing are the results of China's industrial revolution. With Xi Jinping's “Made in China 2025” initiative, Chinese manufacturing will soon become world class. The next industrial revolution will be in Vietnam.

SC
MR

Latest Resources
Warehouse Automation Unleashed
Inside this Special Digital Issue, we explore the state of warehouse automation. Packed with tips on how to approach warehouse automation…
Download

About the Author

Rosemary Coates, Executive Director
Rosemary Coates's Bio Photo

Ms. Coates is the Executive Director of the Reshoring Institute and the President of Blue Silk Consulting, a Global Supply Chain consulting firm. She is a best-selling author of five supply chain management books including: 42 Rules for Sourcing and Manufacturing in China and Legal Blacksmith - How to Avoid and Defend Supply Chain Disputes. Ms. Coates lives in Silicon Valley and has worked with over 80 clients worldwide. She is also an Expert Witness for legal cases involving global supply chain matters. She is passionate about Reshoring.

View Rosemary's author profile.

Subscribe

Supply Chain Management Review delivers the best industry content.
Subscribe today and get full access to all of Supply Chain Management Review’s exclusive content, email newsletters, premium resources and in-depth, comprehensive feature articles written by the industry's top experts on the subjects that matter most to supply chain professionals.
×

Search

Search

Sourcing & Procurement

Inventory Management Risk Management Global Trade Ports & Shipping

Business Management

Supply Chain TMS WMS 3PL Government & Regulation Sustainability Finance

Software & Technology

Artificial Intelligence Automation Cloud IoT Robotics Software

The Academy

Executive Education Associations Institutions Universities & Colleges

Resources

Podcasts Webcasts Companies Visionaries White Papers Special Reports Premiums Magazine Archive

Subscribe

SCMR Magazine Newsletters Magazine Archives Customer Service