Title: Outsourcing in North Carolinas Furniture Industry
1Outsourcing in North Carolinas Furniture Industry
- Meenu Tewari
- UNC Chapel Hill
- April 13, 2004
2The Facts Manufacturing lost 31,100 jobs in 2003
- The decline in several of North Carolinas
traditional manufacturing industries has grabbed
headlines recently - In the last year alone (since 2003), NC lost 5
of its total manufacturing employment, a loss of
31,000 jobs in old and new industries - Textiles 7,700 (21.4)
- Furniture 5,300 (8.4)
- Apparel 5,200 (16.5)
- Computers and Electronics 3,500 (8.3)
3Facts
- Furniture makes up nearly 10 of NCs employment,
second only after Textiles which has a share of
13.5 - Recently, both industries have been hemorrhaging
4Job losses in furniture are real
- The furniture industry lost 5,300 jobs between
Jan 2003 and Jan 2004, a decline of 8.4, and
Textiles lost 21.4 of its employment (or 7,700
jobs) - 75 of wood and metal furniture sold in the US in
2002 was imported. - Even as firms merged, downsized and shut down,
furniture sales rose by 5 in 2003. - Thus, the fortunes of firms and of workers in the
industry are diverging
5The losses have had variable spatial impacts
- Some regions are hurting more than others
- E.g., Davidson county the heart of wooden
furniture (case-goods) manufacturing in NC, with
branch plants of all the big players has lost
over 8200 jobs in wood products since 1992
pushing unemployment to 9 - Wooden furniture is the segment hardest hit by
imports. In 2002 nearly half of all case goods
sold in the US were imported. - But Davidson also gained 8000 service jobs.
6The debate
- Not unreasonably, in popular and policy circles
this erosion of NCs traditional industries has
been linked to trade, especially NAFTA, and to
rising immigration, especially from Mexico.
7There are a growing number of Hispanics in the
Furniture Industry
8But the rise of Hispanic workers in NC predates
NAFTA.
- Rather than a result of looser immigration laws
after NAFTA, it was in part a result of a tight
labor market in furniture in the early 1990s that
drove furniture firms to recruit skilled workers
from Mexico - The tight labor market was the result of
successful efforts by NC counties to diversify
their base beyond furniture - As white-collar jobs arrived with slightly higher
wages than furniture, and absorbed the labor
pools younger workers away from furniture, local
furniture firms began to recruit whole
villages of skilled Mexican workers (rather than
raise wages) - Source personal interviews in High Point
9Is it NAFTA?
- 1990-1994 (Pre-NAFTA)
- Employment in furniture fell by 9 in NC, while
the number of firms grew by 1 - 1994-1999 (Post-NAFTA)
- Employment fell by only 2, and there was no
change in number of establishments - 1999-2003
- Employment fell by 25, and number of firms by 7
- What happened in 1999-2003? China
10The sharpest declines in furniture firms in NC
came after 2000, 6 years after NAFTA was passed
11The sharpest employment declines in NC furniture
also came after 2000
12Thus, the Changes in the NC furniture market were
underway well before trade barriers fell
- Tight labor market in the 1990s pushed US firms
to recruit skilled woodworkers in Mexico - Changes in the structure of the industrys supply
chain throughout the 1980s and early 1990s -
rising demand led to growing capacity utilization
and even inefficient plants were profitable - When the cresting demand abated in the recession
of the early 1990s, the lowest margin firms went
under. - When tariffs fell, intensifying competition added
to the pressure on the bottom line, leading firms
to find ways to cut costs. Strategies - Mergers,
- Takeovers
- And a growing number of firms began to turn to
China for cheaper imports
13Why China? (Why not Mexico?)
- 1. Massive investment in manufacturing capacity
in furniture in the early 1990s - A bulk of this came from Taiwanese investors and
contract brokers in the early 1990s - Taiwan was the largest exporter of furniture to
US till about 1992. - Gradually Taiwanese exporters shifted their
capacity shifted to China
14Why China?
- 2. Training by key US firms during the industrys
consolidation stage (1990s) helped move Chinese
producers up a learning curve from cue sticks and
bar-stools and carved furniture to dining rooms
and bedrooms in modern styles. - By 1996 we had a decent selection of formal
dining room. In the last two years bedroom has
come of age. Now all of a sudden a customer has
to buy only 20 sets of a bedroom to bring in a
container.
15Why China?
- 3. Meanwhile, as buyers began to ratchet up
imports and off-shore sourcing, a key turning
point cemented the rise of the Chinese product in
the US - Massive investment by two of the largest varnish
and resin producers in China - Technical training to local firms in the critical
aspect of finishing
16Why China?
- 4. At the same time, key innovations were taking
place in the shipping industry - Containerization mixed containers
- Overseas warehousing
- Sophisticated logistics
- Investment in shipping is coming from firms
completely unrelated to furniture the goal
appears to be to increase shipping traffic and
profitability on this route (China-US/west),
rather than any industry per se. - Outcome in furniture Even with 100-200 per
bedroom group, the margin for landed imports is
55 rel. to 43 for the industry as a whole
17Why China?
- 5. New investment and actors at the retail end in
the US furniture industry are intensifying
competition - A traditional producer-driven industry, furniture
in the US is turning into a quasi-buyer-driven
industry - Driven by a rise in innovative branding,
retailing and marketing, new trends like
ife-style branding are creating whole new
niches at the retail end - With innovations in retail, low shipping import
costs, even small retailers are entering the
furniture business providing new designs and
variety this puts pressure on trad. producers.
18How are local firms responding?
- Consolidating or closing down
- Manufacturers getting involved with franchise
stores - Outsourcing ever wider segments of their product
lines to China - Focusing on the high or low end of the market.
- The middle price points are hurting the most
- Lowest price points are automating to increase
productivity - The highest quality segments are adopting
innovative training and human resource practices
to retain a versatile and skilled workforce - Segments like upholstered furniture, custom
designs are doing quite well competition with
China is mainly in wood products
19What to do about this?
- The regions history is a guide to sources of
revitalization - Its own early success was a result not only of
low wages, but of creating new institutional
bases of resilience and dynamism - Created institutions in NC that provided firms
with access to trained labor and technologies - Sold their success to the media the power of
image - Sate invested in infrastructure rails and roads
20What to do? (contd)
- Collective action, refocusing on creating new
alliances - The first serious setback came in 1910 mergers
and bankruptcies were rampant - Set of industry leaders emerged to revamp the
industry - Improvements in own plants and product quality
- Support and service industry access to finishes
and input services - Revamped distribution the package car express
- Improved labor relations group life insurance
plan (1917) and monthly bonuses (1916)
21Finally
- Several key competitive advantages remain in US
hands - Design
- Domestic distribution, branding and marketing
- Catering to segments where timely delivery of
high quality, customized products is key - Servicing (after market)
- Even in imports, US manufacturers and retailers
are controlling the flow of goods and designs. - Finally, there exists a strong case for a new
New Deal around novel partnerships between the
state, business, labor and civic society that
will deepen local capacities in dealing with
uncertainty and volatility innovatively, - including developing alternative mechanisms
Pragmatic collaborations - for delivering
social insurance (health-care, benefits) and
training to workers in a volatile world.