plawolf
Lieutenant General
I think some people are assigning more blame to Chinese manufacturers then is deserved.
Chinese manufacturers manufacture to the customers’ design specifications.
Where a manufacturer failed to meet those requirements is when you see product recalls.
Now, just how many product recalls have there been compared to accusations of poor quality?
Yes, there are cowboy companies in China, as there are everywhere, but cowboy companies tend to go out of business a lot faster in China than elsewhere because of how fierce the competitive environment is in China. And rarely are Chinese cowboy manufacturers around long enough to get picked up by major foreign retailers. That is why Chinese exported products are often of higher quality than stuff you can find in general consumption in China. Which ironically is also why so many Chinese people are so willing to believe western accusations of poor quality.
Logically speaking, yes, a customer will be annoyed if the product they buy fails immediately after they buy it and they have to return it to the store for a refund or replacement. But they will be a hell of a lot more annoyed and remember it more if said product didn’t break right away, and instead broken shortly after the warranty on it expired.
The Chinese manufacturer gets the bad rep even if they manufactured the product perfectly according to design specifications; when it is really the design that is the cause of the poor quality.
At the end of the day, you get what you pay for. China price does not defy economics or physics. If you pay peanuts, you should expect monkey models.
In many ways, this is a self-correcting project as China move up the value chain and low end, low margin manufacturing moves to lower wage cost economies like Vietnam and the Philippines.
Chinese manufacturers manufacture to the customers’ design specifications.
Where a manufacturer failed to meet those requirements is when you see product recalls.
Now, just how many product recalls have there been compared to accusations of poor quality?
Yes, there are cowboy companies in China, as there are everywhere, but cowboy companies tend to go out of business a lot faster in China than elsewhere because of how fierce the competitive environment is in China. And rarely are Chinese cowboy manufacturers around long enough to get picked up by major foreign retailers. That is why Chinese exported products are often of higher quality than stuff you can find in general consumption in China. Which ironically is also why so many Chinese people are so willing to believe western accusations of poor quality.
Logically speaking, yes, a customer will be annoyed if the product they buy fails immediately after they buy it and they have to return it to the store for a refund or replacement. But they will be a hell of a lot more annoyed and remember it more if said product didn’t break right away, and instead broken shortly after the warranty on it expired.
The Chinese manufacturer gets the bad rep even if they manufactured the product perfectly according to design specifications; when it is really the design that is the cause of the poor quality.
At the end of the day, you get what you pay for. China price does not defy economics or physics. If you pay peanuts, you should expect monkey models.
In many ways, this is a self-correcting project as China move up the value chain and low end, low margin manufacturing moves to lower wage cost economies like Vietnam and the Philippines.