Day in brief – 2011-06-22

Day in brief – 2011-06-21

  • Something to make smile in the morning – YouTube – Southpark Kyles mom a bitch with lyrics http://bit.ly/jXctxt #
  • Tracktor Bowling music is awesome in the morning. Kicks whatever sleep is left after the coffee right out of my head. :) #
  • New note : Vendor-prefixed CSS Property Overview « Peter Beverloo http://bit.ly/ioufLq #
  • “The Hate Song” By Raging Speedhorn is bringing peace and harmony into my life as I right this. #
  • Write of course, not right. You can feel the harmony… :) #
  • Suicide: One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer @Everything2.com http://bit.ly/kY6rMb #
  • GitHub API v3: 190 methods to build on http://bit.ly/iEGmTu #
  • Have a break, have a KitKat^H^H^H Shuriken – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia http://bit.ly/kNmB8K #

The End of Cheap Labor in China

Slashdot links to this article, that goes inline with this recent forecast.

In what is supposed to be a land of unlimited cheap labor — a nation of 1.3 billion people, whose extraordinary 20-year economic rise has been built first and foremost on the backs of low-priced workers — the game has changed. In the past decade, according to Helen Qiao, chief economist for Goldman Sachs in Hong Kong, real wages for manufacturing workers in China have grown nearly 12% per year. That’s the result of an economy that’s been growing by double digits annually for two decades, fueled domestically by a frenzied infrastructure and housing build-out — one that, for now anyway, continues apace — combined with what was for a time an almost unquenchable thirst for Chinese exports in the developed world. Add to that the fact that in the five largest manufacturing provinces, the Chinese government — worried about an ever widening gap between rich and poor — has raised the minimum wage 14% to 21% in the past year. To Harley Seyedin, president of the American Chamber of Commerce in South China, the conclusion is inescapable: “The era of cheap labor in China is over.”