By Nicholas P. Brown
(Reuters) – Email began to flock on April 9, the 145% rate of President Donald Trump on Chinese imports entered into force. Customers canceled toy orders from the Huntar Company Inc. factory in Guangdong province in China.
But Huntar CEO, Jason Cheung, 45, had already interrupted production in the installation of 600,000 square feet in Shaoguan. He saw the price for what he was: an existential threat to his business, which makes educational toys for the shelves of Walmart and Target, like Learning Resources Inc Blocks, which help teach children mathematics.
“I had to start saving money as soon as possible,” said Cheung. During the four weeks that followed, he reduced production from 60% to 70%, dismissed a third of the 400 Chinese workers in the factory and reduced wages and wages to those still employed.
Now he continues a frantic and long effort to move his operation to Vietnam before the company founded 42 years ago short of money.
He thinks he is about a month old.
The fate of Huntar characterizes a crisis confronted with countless factories in China, where around 80% of toys sold in the United States are manufactured, according to the commercial group The Toy Association. New orders have dropped sharply in the middle of a brutal trade war with the United States which threatens to devastate the sector in the two countries.
Huntar is also unique in a key way: based in the United States, she rides the two sides of the trade war.
On paper, Cheung is Trump's Bogeyman, the Chinese owner of the factory occupying American jobs. But it is also the American rates of the owner of small businesses had to protect. He is the American son of a Chinese immigrant, manages a second generation family business which employs 15 people in the United States – people who would lose their jobs if Huntar vacillates.
Trump said the prices will encourage companies to reshape manufacturing or, at least, hunting it from China.
Huntar illustrates why economists say that is unlikely: a shortage of facilities and workers with an expertise in toy in other countries; heavy equipment that is difficult to move and would cost millions of dollars to replace; And, above all, no time to resolve these obstacles before the chests are dry.
More likely, factories like Cheung will simply closure, a prospect that led Beijing to the negotiating table with US officials in Geneva this weekend, three familiar sources told Reuters with the thought of the Chinese government.
In a realistic way, China cannot replace the demand of the American market for product categories such as toys, furniture and textiles, which already feel the impact of prices, said one of the managers. While the commercial negotiations started, Trump reported that it was open to reducing China's tariffs to 80%.