Special Report: Global Financial Crisis
GUANGZHOU, Oct. 30 (Xinhua) -- The toy exports in
south China's Guangdong Province, a global key toy making base, have shown signs
of recovery and are expected to remain stable, according to the provincial
customs.
"The toy industry still has its international market
despite the adverse market environment," said Li Zhuoming, head of Guangdong Toy
Association.
"The exports will keep stable and more factory
closures are not expected," Li said.
In the first three quarters of this year, the toy
exports reached 4.47 billion U.S. dollars, a year-on-year increase of 6.3
percent. But the growth rate dropped by 16.2 percent compared with the same
period last year, according to the provincial customs statistics.
The second half is usually the peak season for toy
exports. The export volume in Sept. rose by 17.7 percent to 840 million U.S.
dollars.
The Hong Kong/Taiwan-funded companies doing
processing trade still report growing exports while those doing common trade had
shrunken exports.
During the first nine months, the province exported
3.15 billion U.S. dollars of toys by processing trade, up 4.8 percent year on
year. The export by common trade, however, reduced by 6.6 percent to 530 million
U.S. dollars. The export by processing trade accounted for 70.6 percent of the
province's total toy exports.
The drastic fluctuation in toy exports since late
last year had resulted from rising raw material and labor costs, the yuan's
appreciation and an export tax rebate decrease on toys last July.
Large-scale quality recalls also hurt the industry as
western countries raised quality standards and issued several recalls on Chinese
toys last year. China conducted special campaigns to improve toy quality and
banned many unqualified companies from exporting.
As entertainment goods, toys are most vulnerable to
financial crisis.
Guangdong's toy exports to the United States and Hong
Kong, the province's main importers, dropped by 2.5 percent and 13.9 percent
respectively during the first three quarters.
The General Administration of Customs said in a
report last week that 3,631 toy exporters, about half of the industry's
businesses, shut down in 2008. In Guangdong, 1391 factories engaged in toy
exports closed during that period.
Experts said falling orders and a shrinking workforce
are inevitable for toy exporters in the economic slowdown. But the number of toy
makers in Guangdong will remain stable and they are expected to develop to
larger scale with more competitive strength to resist crisis.
The country's Ministry of Finance adjusted export tax
rebates on more than 3,000 items last week to counter the slump. Starting Nov.
1, the export tax rebate on toys will be raised from 11 percent to 14 percent,
which may help to revive the sluggish toy export market.
