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US consumers face rising costs as workers from China to Malaysia ditch ‘numb’ manufacturing jobs

  • Across Asia, factory workers’ wages are on the up as manufacturers struggle to attract staff – especially the young
  • Moving to Mexico, or ‘nearshoring’, may not be the answer to keeping costs down, either. And the trickle-down effect on prices has already begun

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Workers at a factory in China’s Guangdong province. The average age of the typical Asian factory worker has been increasing in recent decades. Photo: EPA-EFE
Consumers in the United States should stock up on Barbie dolls while they’re still relatively cheap. Prices could shoot up in the years ahead, and it’s not just due to the hype around the new blockbuster film.

The same goes for a wide range of products Americans have grown used to splurging on, including clothes, televisions, furniture and toys.

That’s because factories across Asia that have traditionally produced many of these goods are struggling to find workers, The Wall Street Journal reported.

In response, many manufacturers are raising wages and offering other perks – including yoga classes, better cafeteria food, and subsidised kindergarten for workers’ children.

A worker sorts shirts at a garment factory in Hanoi. Factory workers in Vietnam have seen notable pay bumps over the past decade. Photo: AFP
A worker sorts shirts at a garment factory in Hanoi. Factory workers in Vietnam have seen notable pay bumps over the past decade. Photo: AFP

While this is good news for Asian workers, it could be bad news for American shoppers when factories raise prices to offset their rising labour costs. The days of cheap stuff could be coming to an end.

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