CGarage
Well-known member
Unlocking the secrets of Taiwan’s hand tool kingdom
Edit: Trying to post link to TaiwanToday article and as soon as I paste the link, my post says
“Permission Deny”.
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Before Taiwan embarked on its Ten Major Construction Projects in the 1970s, most local firms in the steel industry relied on breaking ships and making steel out of the scraps. The ship-breaking business and hardware manufacturing know-how left by the Japanese from the colonial rule (1895-1945), as well as the availability of raw materials, provided the foundation for the development of the local hand tool industry in central Taiwan.
you might be comparing apple to oranges here. These are manufacturer, not direct to consumer sales. probably different metric.Yes very small industry at $3.5B. A quick look and Harbor Freight alone has an estimated $6.5B in annual sales. SBD sells over $16B a year.
Small and medium enterprises in Taiwan collaborate when they can't handle a project on their own. I wouldn't be worried about them. Some of them actually have operations in China. Outsourcing to Vietnam makes sense from a human resources perspective. If I were to stereotype Vietnamese people, I'd say they are hard working, humble, willing to get their hands dirty, and are willing to suffer. Young people in Taiwan and China look down on blue collar jobs.Their hand tool business is inherently small potato though, mostly making tools for other companies. With big players like Great Star from China, after acquiring so many US companies with their IPs and market network, these small companies don't look like they can survive next round of cost reduction or innovation. Big companies in China, thou, can set up factories in south east Asia and keep moving production to lower cost countries.