498
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
this post was submitted on 03 Apr 2024
498 points (100.0% liked)
Memes
45751 readers
1031 users here now
Rules:
- Be civil and nice.
- Try not to excessively repost, as a rule of thumb, wait at least 2 months to do it if you have to.
founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
I mean, 1 and 5 are basically fancy ways of saying "we can't stop slavery so why bother trying" which, erm, isn't exactly great...
Are they really? You got a source? This is pretty cool if true.
I thought Alibaba was for businesses and aliexpress was their consumer site?
Whatever makes you sleep at night. ☺️
That's most likely not the case. Larger corporations require more workforce stability and require better trained labour to maintain quality control. These needs are better fulfilled by factories who actually hire their labourers instead of hiring temps and auxiliary workers who make considerably less.
Factories that are supplying corporations like temu can only maintain a profit margin if they rely on the cheaper auxiliary labour. Often times hiring and firing them for specific manufacturing quotas. This is one of the reasons temu doesn't have any consistency in quality.
If anything they are extremely underpriced, especially when you equate the cost of shipping. The cost of a lot of items on temu are significantly lower than the production cost. As you said it's rare to have a markup that exceeds 50% and a lot of stuff on temu is significantly cheaper than that.
I believe temu operates as a way to minimize the excess of surplus production. Basically in economics it's always hard to balance the size of your labour force to meet the exact level of consumer demand.
Demand could be growing, so we built a new factory. Great, we are now employing more workers and have the ability to supply the increased demand. And then something like COVID happens, exports stop, demand halts, and now you have a factory with no work.
In the west, it's tough shit, pack it up, go home. However, in China local governments can supply local businesses with loans, hoping that demand returns and they can eventually turn a profit. So they pay the factories to produce anyways, well what do they produce if there is no actual demand for export. Well anything, it doesn't matter, it's just about maintaining productivity levels. Just throw the shit in the warehouse and we'll figure out what to do with it later......enter temu.
But you aren't buying from the factory, you're buying from temu, the middle man.
Only if you equate the use of cheap auxiliary labour, the sky rocketing debt of local Chinese governments, and the subsidization of global shipping offered by the Chinese fed.
The problem with this version of robbing Peter to pay Paul is that there isn't actually any profit imported into the country. The loans and subsidies offered by their government were implemented to intice an actual return, where the Fed supports the local government, who support the company, who use the profit to support the workers. When there is no profit, the system is just aquiring debt.