Need a Job? China Inc. Is Coming to America and It's Hiring
Bloomberg
(Bloomberg Business) -- Japan led a wave of investment into America in the 1980s. Now it's China's turn.
Quotes in the article
A new report described as the first of its kind has
broken down how much Chinese money is flowing into America, where it's
going and its economic impact.
Chinese investors
are already the biggest holders of U.S. government debt and are known
for snapping up trophy assets like the Waldorf Astoria Hotel. The new
analysis by the National Committee on U.S.-China Relations and Rhodium
Group has found that Chinese companies and investors are putting money
into everything from American copper plants and factories to real
estate, across the country.
The biggest benefactors are districts in North Carolina, Illinois, New York, Virginia, and Texas.
Here are the numbers:
Between
2000 and 2014, Chinese firms spent almost $46 billion on acquisitions
and new establishments across America, much of it in the past five years
alone. By the end of last year there were 1,583 establishments by
Chinese firms across the U.S., according to the report.
Still,
Chinese FDI is only at the initial stage that Japanese firms reached in
the 1980s and is tipped for further growth. The U.S. could receive
between $100 billion and $200 billion of investment by 2020, creating
between 200,000 and 400,000 jobs, the report found.
Chinese
firms directly employ more than 80,000 workers across America, up from
15,000 five years previous and will likely quadruple that number over
the next five years. Indirect employment is probably much greater and
job creation through greenfield projects alone is nearing 10,000, the
report estimates.
Headlines on Chinese and U.S.
relations are usually dominated by tensions over trade and security as
China flexes its economic muscle on the world stage. Corporate takeovers
in the U.S. by foreign companies can be controversial as locals fear
losing their jobs. But the report found that Chinese investment is
saving jobs by offering new financing to troubled buisnesses.
One
example: A $100 million copper plant located close to Thomasville,
Alabama is said to have revived an area with one of the state's highest
unemployment rates. Dragon Precise Copper Group employs more than 200
people with plans to hire 500 in total, the report said. And Fuyao Glass
bought a shuttered General Motors plant outside Dayton, Ohio and
pledged to create 1,500 jobs and invest hundreds of millions of dollars.
"Fears
that Chinese acquirers could systematically move acquired assets and
related jobs back to China have not materialized," the report said.
"Instead, new Chinese owners have, in most cases, sustained and expanded
local employment after they acquired U.S. assets."
Worries that Chinese companies will steal American intellectual property are also overdone, the report found.
"There
is no evidence that Chinese investors are moving high
value-added activities back to China. Instead, U.S. innovation
clusters, strong protection of intellectual property rights, and
the talent pool are major draws for Chinese companies, which now spend
hundreds of millions of dollars every year on research and development
activities in the U.S.
To contact the author on this story:
Enda Curran at ecurran8@bloomberg.net To contact the editor on this
story: Rina Chandran at rchandran12@bloomberg.net
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