Manufacturing still backbone of the economy
Nothing demonstrates the striking power shift between China and the United Kingdom more than the planned investment by China into a high-speed railway and nuclear power station in the UK, deals clinched during President Xi Jinping's recent state visit.
While the UK's industrial advantages have declined, China's have grown. Branded the "world's factory", China is the only country that boasts all the industrial categories as classified by the United Nations. Aside from advantages in traditional labor-intensive manufacturing and consumer goods, China has also gained an upper hand in equipment manufacturing, in which its output now accounts for one-third of the world's total, 2.5 times that of Germany, which ranks second. All this has laid a solid foundation for China's ascension to become the world's second-largest economy.
However, there are also pressures threatening China's role as "world's workshop". Such pressures are not just from pure economic factors such as soaring labor costs, but also from the fact that the market value of domestic electronics giants with numerous patents and annual profits of billions of yuan is lower than that of some loss-suffering enterprises whose market value is only based on speculative concepts.