Changes of business mode of Hong Kong-funded enterprises in Mainland China: from compensation trade to processing in order

KL Sun pointed out that in the early period of the mainland’s economic reform, Hong Kong manufacturers ran their businesses in the mainland in four major modes: processing in order, producing by sample, assembling by parts and compensation trade. Compensation trade was the earliest business mode. Processing in order came next. The two were not totally the same.
In 1979, at the invitation from Recommendation Office of China Resources Group, KL Sun inspected Nanhai, Panyu and Shunde to look for a site for Kin Hip Metalware and Plastic Factory. He finally chose Nanhai for the factory and ran it by means of compensation trade. Kin Hip provided raw materials, equipment and technical guidance, while mainland units provided factories and workers. KL Sun described that mainland factories were poor equipped for they were still using the ‘monkey machines’, which were no longer used in Hong Kong since the 1950s. That’s why Kin Hip had to provide more advanced equipment for injection moulding, stamping, electroplating, etc. When the products were processed in Nanhai, they were shipped to Hong Kong for packaging and export. In the early years of setting the factory in mainland, mainland logistics were not professional and the truck drivers hauled industrial products by poultry trucks. Kin Hip paid a monthly processing fee to the Nanhai unit and provided the equipment for a price, the ownership of which went to the Nanhai unit. The Nanhai unit assigned a cadre member as Kin Hip’s legal representative. He was a salaried factory director in name, but in reality he only dealt with the Customs, Fire Services and other government bodies. Kin Hip stationed a technical supervisor at the factory. He held the authority to manage all factory affairs. In case of fires or industrial accidents, the legal representative was held responsible criminally. KL Sun was in the opinion that a legal representative could lower the risks of mainland investments made by Hong Kong manufacturers. Kin Hip had not become a legal representative until 1992.
Later on some bad Hong Kong manufacturers forced up equipment prices (commonly known as ‘exploiting an advantage’), preying on mainland units’ earnings from the processing charges. The mainland authority concerned corrected the defect of compensation trade by introducing the three above mentioned modes such as processing by order. Hong Kong manufacturers retained their ownership to the equipment, which were lent to the cooperating units for free. The External Economics and Trading Office (EETO) verified the processing charges. Since then Kin Hip had opted for these three modes of operation. In that year Kin Hip already moved to Shilong, Dongguan. Later on PRC promoted ‘Sino-foreign Equity Joint Venture Law’, and the Shilong unit requested to become a joint venture with Kin Hip. To KL Sun, a joint venture would benefit the town’s unit in many ways, for instance, tax relief and foreign currency income. Because Kin Hip did not want to lose control, the factory moved to Pinghu, Shenzhen, where no joint venture was demanded by the local unit.

Interviewee
Company Kin Hip Metal and Plastic Fy. Ltd
Date
Subject Industry
Duration 13m10s
Language Cantonese
Material Type
Collection
Source Hong Kong Memory Project Oral History Interview
Repository Hong Kong Memory Project
Note to Copyright Copyright owned by Hong Kong Memory Project
Accession No. LKF-SKL-SEG-009
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