Archives April 2008

China’s Tsinghua Univ. to cooperate with Siemens in technology

BEIJING, April 15 (Xinhua) — Tsinghua University signed a five-year contract here on Tuesday with the German multinational Siemens to establish a technology exchange center.

The center will conduct research in rail transportation, waste water treatment, energy conservation, emission reduction, intelligent transportation systems and other fields.

“Cooperation between universities and multinational companies will accelerate the speed of putting new technology into practice. The two sides can learn from each other and achieve a win-win situation,” said Zhang Yaoxue, chief director of the higher learning department of Ministry of Education.

IT poster boy draws huge income at Newhuadu

TANG Jun, a poster boy of the Chinese IT industry, was appointed yesterday as the president and chief executive officer of South China-based private firm Newhuadu Industrial Group Co, after a 14-year career in Microsoft China and Shanda Entertainment.

He will be paid a record income package valued at one billion yuan (US$140 million), including shares and warrants, the former Shanda president said at a press conference in Beijing yesterday.

Tang, 46, replaced Fuzhou-based Newhuadu’s founder Chen Fashu as president and CEO and he will manage the company’s daily operations, strategic development, platform operations and external investment, Chen said.

“I will use my experience to make Newhuadu the most influential firm in China,” Tang said yesterday.

The business scope of Newhuadu, founded in 1997, covers retail, real estate, mining, high-tech and tourism industries. It has invested in firms like Zijin Mining, the country’s No. 1 gold miner. Newhuadu aims to list the firms it had invested in on the domestic market, including Zijin Mining, by the end of this year, Chen said.

Zijin is set to debut its shares in the domestic market this month and Tang’s income package includes Zijin’s shares.

Tang, who studied in Japan and the United States in his 20s, joined Shanghai-based Shanda four years ago after working as Microsoft China’s president for 10 years.

Tang helped Shanda go public on Nasdaq in May 2004, which made the game firm’s founder Chen Tianqiao the richest man on the Chinese mainland that year. Tang also helped Shanda to find partners like Intel, Hewlett-Packard and Changhong.

During his four-year tenure, Tang bought out Sina.com and acquired South Korea’s Actoz Soft by paying US$91.7 million for a 29-percent share.

Business Strategies: staff costs rising rapidly, says survey

A survey by accountants Grant Thornton says that businesses are seeing rapidly rising staff costs, particularly in emerging economies.

As the cost and availability of funding becomes an increasing problem for businesses, the cost of attracting and retaining staff is also increasing. This is leading to a cash squeeze on businesses.

The staff costs are most acutely felt in countries which have historically had low salary costs. Skilled and executive workers are demanding, and getting, more as companies grow. Alex MacBeath, global leader for privately held businesses at Grant Thornton International says, “Significantly, it is the emerging economies that are being hardest hit by increased staff costs. This is real evidence that the era of downward pressure on inflation in emerging economies is coming to an end.”

The survey found that 59 per cent of privately held businesses (Grant Thornton calls them PHBs) are more focused on finding and retaining employees than they were a year ago. Emerging economies were most focused with Vietnam top with 84 per cent of businesses more focused, followed closely by mainland China (81 per cent).

Laurie Kalman, executive director, HR strategy for Grant Thornton International adds, “Retaining the right employees is important to the long term success of any business but is particularly critical for PHBs. Recruitment is an expensive process and an organisation that continuously hires while losing talent internally will not be able to prosper and grow.”

It is these privately held businesses – where staff may see their prospects as limited compared to public and / or multinational companies – that are seeing the pressures most, says Grant Thornton.

So, why do staff leave? The most common reason, the firm says in its report, is staff who are resistant to increased workload. 41% of companies in the global survey gave this as a reason.

The issue leaves PHBs in a cleft stick – unable to retain and recruit the best staff companies face “increased operating costs, loss of business and a drop in customer service standards.”

This leads to companies focussing more of their time and resources on recruiting and retaining staff. Also, culture appears to play a part. Where mobility of labour is traditionally low, companies place a lower priority on these strategies.

There is a correlation of sorts with the countries that reported increased staff costs. 91% of respondents in Mainland China said they were seeing increases, whilst just 17% did in Japan.

The survey does not, however, correlate these figures with inflation and interest rates and, in those, China and Japan are also at opposite ends of the scale.

Perhaps surprisingly, New Zealand comes very high in the list with 79% but the really big surprise is Botswana with 86%.

At the other end of the scale are the US and the UK with 48 and 47% respectively. Both of these economies are expected to suffer from recessionary pressures and already in the US, there are reports of people having trouble finding work in the professional and commercial sectors. Sitting at the middway point in the table are Germany, Hong Kong, the Philippines and Russia. Almost alone amongst south east Asian economies in reporing a low figure (45%) was Thailand.

Rising yuan will give IT a bumpy ride

THE micro-electronics industry of China, the world’s biggest IT manufacturing region, will face a bumpy road in 2008 with the appreciation of the yuan and the rising cost of raw materials, industry insiders said during an IT show yesterday.

“The industry is currently developing at a steady and healthy pace but it will face challenges especially on exports as the yuan becomes more valuable,” Wang Bingke, vice-director of the enterprise restructuring and operation department under the Industry and Information Ministry, said at NEPCON/EMT China 2008.

The industry’s revenue for the first two months this year was 674.4 trillion yuan (US$96.34 billion), up 16.3 percent year on year.

Industry costs for the same period amounted to 580 billion yuan, which is a 16 percent increase over the same period last year.

In 2007, the micro-electronics industry’s revenue, which composed 12 percent of China’s total industry revenue, amounted to 5.6 billion yuan, an 18 percent increase over the 2006 figure, according to Wang.

Policy push

On Thursday, the yuan cracked the seven mark against the United States dollar,a record high since it was de-pegged from the US currency in 2005 at about 8.3.

A US-based Cookson Electronics representative said its China operations would not only be affected by appreciation of the yuan, but by the rising cost of raw materials.

“There’s not much we can do as a company but to hope for favorable government policies since this is an issue faced by all export-related industries,” he said.

A representative from Stadium Asia, an electronics manufacturing services provider, shared similar sentiments, saying that the entire industry faced problems with the yuan’s appreciation.

GKG Precision Machine Co, specializing in screen printer development, said it may be willing to negotiate the price of its products in order to remain competitive.

Copper price for delivery declined 0.3 percent in three months from its March 6 record of US$8,820 a ton. Prices have increase 2.6 percent this month.

The four-day NEPCON China closed yesterday after attracting more than 650 companies from a total of 22 countries and regions.

Executive Pay Hits China’s Radar

During my two-hour-long interview with a senior Chinese banker recently, we covered a lot of topics, from the credit crisis in the U.S. to the emergence of consumerism in China. He was unusually open for a Chinese executive. But when I asked about his multi-million yuan ($1 is about seven yuan) compensation last year, he fell silent.

If you think executive pay is a controversial topic in the U.S., or that the tension between highly-paid CEOs and shareholders is high here, you should see China. Publicly-traded Chinese companies didn’t start disclosing executive-pay information until a couple of years ago, and it instantly became an explosive topic in proxy seasons. Many Chinese raised questions such as, “What do they base their pay on?” and “How could they make more than the state chairman?”

The senior banker said he would be more than happy if his name weren’t associated with the topic. On the one hand, he explained, top executives at public companies do make a lot more than executives at state-owned enterprises and government officials, not to mention the majority of ordinary Chinese. On the other hand, he said, people like him are make far less than their counterparts on Wall Street and in Hong Kong. To attract and retain talented people who are increasingly moving around globally, public Chinese companies need to offer comparable salaries and bonuses. So the pay of executives like him are more or less a compromise between China’s reality and market competition.

“But how can I say this to those who make very little?” he asked. “They won’t understand, and I don’t expect them to understand.”

I see his point. I can’t imagine China going back to the egalitarian society that we escaped 30 years ago, in which everybody received a salary based on their educational background and seniority, instead of their capabilities and achievements. Few people will work hard unless they know they will be rewarded, whether that reward is a bonus for a banker, power for a politician or a harvest for a farmer. That’s simply human nature, and China’s economic growth in the past three decades is the best evidence of it.

But I also understand why the unemployed, the middle class and lowly-paid government officials get angry at what they see as astronomical pay. The average annual income of urban workers in China last year was 24,932 yuan ($3,561), according to the National Bureau of State Statistics. Farmers and migrant workers make far less than that. Meanwhile, Shenzhen Development Bank Chairman and Chief Executive Frank Newman made roughly 23 million yuan ($3.3 million) in 2007, about 922 times the average urban pay [in an earlier version of this column, I mistakenly said 92 times], and Ping An Insurance Co. Chairman Ma Mingzhe made more than 66 million yuan ($9.3 million), or 2,647 times a regular worker’s pay. (He donated 20 million yuan to a charity.)

The executive-compensation figures have triggered a public backlash. In an online vote on Sina.com, one of China’s top portals, 93% of voters disapproved of the executive-pay practices at Ping An and Shenzhen Development Bank.

Mr. Ma of Ping An has also been made a villain in Internet chat rooms and on online forums since his pay information became public late last month. “Is the 66 Million Yuan Pay an April Fool’s Joke?” demands a post on the popular online forum Tianya.cn. Last week, 1,055 car owners petitioned the China Insurance Regulatory Commission to investigate Ping An’s executive-pay practices. They also asked the regulator to find out how much of the obligatory car-accident insurance fees they paid went to Ping An’s executive compensation. The petition has been cheered on by Internet posters, with a 7,000-word-long post depicting Mr. Ma and Ping An’s rise to fortune widely circulated between forums. The article includes many unverified details, and allegations that Mr. Ma used connections with powerful people to become one of the wealthiest people in China.

More importantly, some state-controlled public companies rely on monopolies and preferential government policies for their profits, so there’s an understandable debate about whether these firms’ government-appointed executives should get paid handsomely — and if their compensation should be linked to those “guaranteed” profits.

Ping An and Shenzhen Development Bank are no longer state-controlled, although they were started with funding from local governments. But CEOs at state-controlled mega-banks, such as Bank of China, Industrial and Commercial Bank of China and Construction Bank of China, are appointed by the government, and their positions are equivalent to vice ministers. Some company leaders have been called back to work as government officials. The Chinese government doesn’t disclose income for its officials, but vice ministers are believed to make less than 10,000 yuan a month (although they do get other benefits, such as housing and drivers). All CEOs at the nine publicly-traded banks received more than one million yuan in compensation in 2006.

As these banks are getting better at disclosing information about their executive pay, they also need to answer the questions raised on online forums again and again: Do these officials deserve more than 10 times their government pay once they are appointed as CEOs of public companies? Do they have the managerial talent to be retained with shareholders’ money? Is their loyalty to the government, or to their shareholders? If some of the bank’s income comes from its monopoly position and preferential government policies, should the CEO be rewarded for that?

There are no easy answers to these questions: While the U.S. and other industrial countries have been debating executive pay for many years, China has just started the discussion — and has to conduct it against the backdrop of a complex asset structure and political system. But it seems that the Chinese public is determined to ask these tough questions every proxy season. And that in itself is encouraging.

Write to Li Yuan at li.yuan@wsj.com.

China’s Labor Advances May Affect U.S. Prices

As Chinese workers gain more power and employment choices, the country’s economy has had to adjust. And these changes may soon impact prices on goods in America. Host Steve Inskeep talks with NPR’s Frank Langfitt and Alexandra Harney, author of The China Price, about what the future may hold for the world economy.

In recent years Chinese workers gained leverage due to an unanticipated labor shortage, Langfitt says.

“This gave more workers a lot more power vis-a-vis management,” he says, adding that while people were desperate to have jobs in the ’90s, today they may walk out of a factory if they don’t like their job or the working conditions.

This shift in power has led to increased costs for Chinese manufacturers.

“China used to be so cheap they were unbeatable,” Harney says. “The China price was the cheapest price you could get for anything around the world, but now that China is becoming more expensive, thousands of factories are starting to close down in Southern China.”

As a result, Harney says, American companies will start paying more for goods they buy from China.

“I think that we are going to start seeing more and more of this show up on American price tags this year and next year,” she says. “Some retailers and importers are telling me that they are already starting to have to raise the prices in the U.S.”

Chinese salaries likely to rise as government encourages collective bargaining

Hangzhou, April 12 (Xinhua) — China is launching a systematic effort to support ordinary workers to bargain for salaries with their employers.

The All China Federation of Trade Unions (ACFTU), the national labor organization with a membership of 169.94 million people in 2007, released its plan to promote the collective bargaining in more industries and regions.

The mechanism would allow trade unions or labor representatives to take the lead in appealing for salary rises and directly negotiate with employers until the two sides reached a plan.

“We would promote the negotiations of reasonable salaries, bonus, allowances and subsidies,” said Sun Chunlan, ACFTU vice-chairperson, at a meeting here on Thursday.

The idea to solve salary disputes through organized negotiation was introduced by former the Ministry of Labor and Social Security (now the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security), which issued a tentative measure in 2000.

“The employer and the workers are equal in raising suggestions and have the same veto power,” it said.

The promotion of such a practice, however, has been hindered by the lack of legislative support and the diversified situation of both public and non-public enterprises. In addition, the growing number of job seekers gave employers far more leverage than the workers in bargaining labor prices.

“And trade unions in many private companies are established by the business owners and are affiliated to the company. Therefore, they are unable to effectively bargain salary rises for the workers,” said Xu Xiaojun, a professor from China Institute of Industrial Relations who specialized in trade union study.

“Unreasonable salaries have become a major problem causing social conflict in the Chinese labor market.”

ACFTU Vice-chairperson Sun Chunlan said it would explore and try to solve existing problems in promoting salary negotiation.

Authorities in Shanghai issued a detailed plan in March to promote such practices. It aimed to establish the bargaining mechanism in 75 percent of state-owned enterprises and 60 percent of non-public enterprises with trade unions this year. The plan would expand the number of laborers covered in the mechanism by 10 percent.

In March, a salary negotiation in Hua Yue, an adhesive tape producer in Hebei Province with more than 700 employees, lifted workers’ annual minimum salary by 1,860 yuan (265 U.S. dollars). Experienced workers enjoyed a higher increase.

According to data from the National Bureau of Statistics, per-capita disposable income was 13,786 yuan in urban areas last year, up 17.2 percent, or 12.2 percent in real terms. Per-capita income was 4,140 yuan in rural areas, up 15.4 percent, or 9.5 percent in real terms.

CNC Manager (fi174cz)

Company: One leading textile machinery manufacturing company from European

Title: CNC Manager
Location: ChangZhou
Responsibility

1. Coordinate and organize the dept based on the department’s target
2. Optimize manufacturing structure and efficiency
3. Capacity control, order supervise and quality assurance
4. Budget and cost center responsibility
5. Report to the chief of manufacturing

Qualification

1. University education in metal processing (CNC)
2. Possess experience of working in machine field several years, and management experience
3. Possess comparably good management ability, and be able to communicate in English, master computer operation. And prepare proper reporting.
4. Have high responsibility, active attitude, enterprising spirit, and good work ethic.
5. Have good communication ability with superior and subordinates.

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_fi174cz@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

Cost Controller (fi176sh)

Our client is a world leader in AFC (Automatic Fare Collection) systems for public transport. It successfully completed many metro projects for numerous cities around the world. In Asia, it provided AFC systems for Hong Kong, Taipei, Manila, and more recently by TPTS, such as New Delhi, Bangkok, Nanjing, Beijing, Caracas Bubai ect. With the fast development of metro industry in China, Asia and many other countries, our client will reinforce their JV in R&D, program management and other operational positions.

Job Description:

Responsibilities:

1. Analyze, evaluate the cost (technology) for the company and provide budget or offer to clients.
2. Responsible for the risk calculation & control of the company;
3. Follow up the cost condition of projects; provide the necessary supporting to project review (forecast and suggestion).
4. Inspect the stock (include row materials, WIP, finish goods), analyze & forecast the profit or loss for materials.
5. Take part in preparing the cost control rule and follow up the enforce status.
6. Other works assigned by GM or DGM.

Requirements

1. B.Sc. Finance, accounting, economic or equivalent.
2. 5+ years working experience in cost management and risk control in Manufacturing or Software company
3. CPA or ACCA qualification ;
4. Good knowledge of procurement, manufacturing and logistic
5. Good ability of communication. Good English Level
6. Good ability of using Excel and PPT to analyze and evaluate figures

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_fi176@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?

Office Manager(eo140sh)

Responsibilities:

1. Implement and monitor office management and other regulations
2. Improve office management and administration
3. Optimize HR process, such as recruitment, contract management, on-board process, exit interview etc. – Negotiate admin contracts, e.g. office lease, hotel, air ticket, car rental, etc.
4. Communicate with business division, explain and response to the customers’ complaints and request;
5. Coordinate and arrange relevant service for VIP/top management ‘s visit and conference &training
6. Ensure and enhance office security &safety system
7. Manage renovation, office seating plan: communication with each division on their needs make suitable proposal, select vendor and conduct the office renovation, make sure the project going on smoothly to meet the requirements.
8. Supervise team members and tea ladies – Other tasks from managers

Requirement ?

1. University graduates;
2. Minimum 2~3 years work experience of HR& Admin support experience as an Office Manager is preferred – Strong PC skills: MS Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Outlook
3. Good command of English, fluent Shanghai
4. Good sense of responsibility, enthusiasm for the initiative, pragmatic and willing to do Quick-learner, team player with good interpersonal skills

* Please send us your complete resume (both in Chinese and in English to: ‘topjob_eo140sh@dacare.com'(Please replace “#” with “@”)
* In the email subject MUST you plus the position name ?in either En or Ch ?