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INDUSTRY
Electrical and electronics sector upbeat
Government policies and measures have benefited local manufacturers
in a big way
NAREERAT WIRIYAPONG
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Suraporn
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The government has been given the thumbs-up by local electrical
appliance manufacturers by implementing the long-delayed restructuring
of import taxes, while the electronics sector has received a boost
from incentives offered for the hard-disk drive industry by the
Board of Investment.
Overall, the electrical and electronics sector has contributed
about one-third of the country's export revenue over the past five
years. Thailand has become the largest production base for the
electrical appliance industry in Asean with many international
manufacturers engaged in expansion programmes. The country is also
the second largest hard-disk drive exporter in the world after
Singapore.
This large and fast-growing sector is currently dominated by foreign
brands and manufacturers. Consequently, the government has taken
steps to ensure that the investment climate remains favourable.
As of yet, a restructuring of the tax system related to this sector,
an area cited as an obstacle to doing business in Thailand, has
not been completed. Nevertheless, the government has taken steps
to deal with this issue that have been well-received by the manufacturers.
It started by proposing to cut duties on "fast-track" items
including televisions and fibre-optics two years ago. This measure
was implemented in response to the planned relocation of some foreign
manufacturers with substantial investments in Thailand led by Japan's
Toshiba, to lower-cost countries.
Under the tariff scheme, the rates are 1% on raw materials, 5%
on intermediate parts and 10% for finished products for those items
imported from non-Asean members, while within the Asean Free Trade
Area (Afta), the rates, which are now 0-5%, will all be cut to
zero by 2010.
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| The award-winning 4GB 1-inch microdrives used in and mobile
devices are produced at Hitachi Global Storage Technologies'
Prachin Buri plant. |
Manufacturers also praised a resolution from the cabinet earlier
this month to cut tariffs on raw materials and components used
for producing electrical and electronic products. Import tariffs
on 76 items would be waived or reduced to less than 5%, benefiting
producers of refrigerators, fans, washing machines, microwave ovens
and rice cookers.
The government expects to lose about one billion baht per year
as a result of these tax cuts. On the other hand, the benefits
are projected to help serve as an incentive for companies to keep
their manufacturing operations in Thailand as well as boost the
country's competitiveness and attract new investments from abroad.
"The tariff cuts should have been implemented a year ago
(when Afta took effect in the beginning of 2003), but due to the
cabinet reshuffles in which two industry ministers were replaced,
they were delayed," said Suraporn Simakulthorn, president
of the Electrical, Electronics and Allied Industries Club of the
Federation of Thai Industries.
With the signing of a number of bilateral free-trade area agreements,
especially the pact with China, the market will open up considerably
and the government will need to establish some industrial standards
to cope with the rising imports.
As well, the Thaksin administration should do more to support
the local electrical industry in its plans to establish a national
brand sometime later this year.
The members of the Federation for the Electrical Industry have
jointly set up a company to work toward building Thailand's first
home appliance brand. Government support for this project is needed
in terms of funding the marketing budget to build up brand awareness
and providing incentives for upgrading human resources and research
and development.
In the electronics industry, the BoI's HDD package, launched earlier
this year, has drawn investment worth more than 30 billion baht
from three major players to Thailand. This will definitely benefit
local electronics part makers. US-based Western Digital (WD), for
example, plans to outsource 60 billion baht worth of locally produced
materials to serve its six-billion-baht new investment in the country.
With the new incentive package aimed at promoting cluster production
in Thailand, HDD manufacturers have been offered up to eight years
of tax incentives if they meet the criteria for R&D input and
technology transfer to their part suppliers.
By luring investors to Thailand, the government is hoping to overtake
Singapore as the world's number one HDD exporter by 2006. Though
it believes that reaching this target is possible, WD has concerns
over the lack of specific engineering skills in Thailand.
Still, most of the electronic parts manufacturers are subcontracting
to electronics manufacturers, the facets of the business that require
huge investments but generate very low margins.
Foreign brand owners still control design and marketing activities
that consume less resources and generate higher margins.
The government should take more steps to support subcontract manufacturers
by encouraging them to upgrade into more value-added products by
building up their own design and marketing capabilities.
As long as parts makers and supporting industries remain financially
sound and technologically advanced, Thailand will remain attractive
in the eyes of international manufacturersand consequently the
electronics industry will become an increasingly more valuable
sector to the economy.
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