HomeNewsBusinessChina's tumbling prices push some exporters to the brink

China's tumbling prices push some exporters to the brink

When Kris Lin, the owner of a lighting manufacturer in China, received this year's first order from a close overseas client, he was faced with a difficult decision: take a loss or advise employees not to return after the Lunar New Year.

February 05, 2024 / 07:30 IST
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Kris Lin, the owner of a lighting manufacturer in China, was confronted with a difficult decision when he received the first order of the year from a close overseas client: either take it at a loss or advise employees not to return after the Lunar New Year.
Kris Lin, the owner of a lighting manufacturer in China, was confronted with a difficult decision when he received the first order of the year from a close overseas client: either take it at a loss or advise employees not to return after the Lunar New Year.

When Kris Lin, who owns a lighting factory in China, received this year's first order from a close overseas client, he faced a distressing choice: take it at a loss, or tell workers not to come back after the Lunar New Year.

"It was impossible for me to lose this order," said Lin, who plans to re-start his factory in the eastern city of Taizhou at around half its capacity after the Feb. 10-17 holiday break.

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"I could have lost this client forever, and it would have endangered livelihoods for so many people. If we delay resuming production, people might start doubting our business. If rumours spread, it affects the decisions of our suppliers."

Prolonged factory deflation is threatening the survival of smaller Chinese exporters who are locked in relentless price wars for shrinking business as higher interest rates abroad and rising trade protectionism squeeze demand.