| High-tech TVs new guide to China's economy(Xinhua)Updated: 2006-10-03 09:57  Faced with a 44.6-percent anti-dumping tariff that the European Union 
slapped on TV imports from China, many domestic TV makers reacted by expanding 
their overseas production bases, said Han Facai, a spokesman of Shenzhen-based 
Konka.
 
 Konka set up production centers in Mexico, Indonesia, Turkey and 
Thailand. "Our overseas facilities are now capable of producing three million TV 
sets a year and might soon surpass our Shenzhen headquarters in terms of 
output," said Han.
 
 Changhong, a former military radar equipment factory 
in the hinterland of Sichuan Province, southwest China, set up a new production 
center in the Czech Republic, a 100-million-U.S.-dollar workshop that is 
designed to produce at least one million flat-screen TVs a year -- most of which 
will be sold in the European market.
 
 "Many other domestic companies 
have worked out ways to deal with trade barriers - for example, exporting spares 
instead of complete TV sets, or collaborating with overseas companies to produce 
Chinese brands," said Yu Zhipu, secretary general of the home appliance branch 
of China Chamber of Commerce for Import and Export of Machinery Electronics 
Products.
 Technological barriers 
 Chinese TV makers' success in the international market was built on the back 
of cheap, low-tech cathode-ray tube (CRT) models that still make up more than 80 
percent of China's TV output, says an industry analyst. 
 "In the world's wealthier economies, CRT technology is losing ground fast to 
snazzier, more complicated technologies such as liquid-crystal (LCD), plasma, 
and rear-projection digital-light processing (DLP) models," says Shen Wenjian, a 
Zhejiang University professor and consultant for Haier Group. 
 The companies that dominate these high-tech categories are the traditional 
big-name brands such as Sharp, Panasonic, Samsung and Philips. American personal 
computer giants Dell and Hewlett-Packard have also entered the competition. 
 "Chinese companies will not sit back and watch their international rivals 
dominate the market," said Prof. Shen. "Technological transformation is a 
difficult and painstaking process but it is an irreversible trend." 
 The more lucrative high-tech TVs may also offer a 
lifeline to domestic TV makers that are struggling to survive on meager profits, 
a result of suicidal price cuts in recent years. 
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