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Re: tradetracker post# 67

Monday, 12/26/2005 7:27:57 AM

Monday, December 26, 2005 7:27:57 AM

Post# of 73
Car jobs in high demand in Thailand as output grows

By Chawadee Nualkhair and Chang-Ran Kim

BANGKOK/TOKYO, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Joe Goh, a business
development director at Thai auto parts maker AAPICO Hitech PCL
, is facing challenges many competitors in the West can
only dream of.

"We've got to have more capacity," he said, describing plans
to kick off a new plant in mid-2006 and possibly seek partners
outside Thailand for more opportunities to expand.

"We have to double our people."

Goh's situation -- shared by many of his peers -- is fanning
a boom for auto-sector workers in Thailand, a far cry from the
picture in North America and Europe where thousands face job
losses due to severe overcapacity at weaker car brands.

Behind the healthy labour market is heady growth in domestic
auto demand and Thailand's accommodating business environment
for foreign automakers to manufacture vehicles for export.

That has manufacturers from booming Toyota Motor Corp.
<7203.T> to embattled Mitsubishi Motors Corp. <7211.T> rushing
to add capacity and find the manpower to support growth.

After more than doubling in the three years to 2004, vehicle
production in Thailand is expected to expand by about 8 percent
this year to roughly 1 million. Over the next few years, it will
further balloon to 1.4 million units annually, predicts research
firm Automotive Resources Asia.

"Thai production is certainly booming and in most cases
resulting in a commensurate increase in employment," said Ashvin
Chotai, director of Asian automotive research at Global Insight.

"Automotive jobs are rising and there is a shortage of
skilled workers and professionals. Hence...job mobility is high
and it's fair to say it is a bit of a sellers' market."

No forecast is available for the resulting increase in the
number of jobs, but analysts say a looming shortage of
experienced auto workers looks certain to keep lifting wages.

According to the Bank of Thailand, manufacturing workers
now number 6.1 million, accounting for 17.25 percent of
Thailand's working population -- up from 15.5 percent at the
start of 2001.

Hay Group, a U.S.-based global human resources management
consultancy, estimates manufacturing salaries in Thailand grew
by 6.5 percent this year and would continue to rise at a similar
clip in 2006 on the back of sustained economic growth.

"The Thai economy is currently highly competitive for
employees with three to five years of work experience, and it is
likely to stay this way for some time," Anuchit Veerasiriyanon,
an official at Hay Group Thailand, said in a recent report.



WELCOMING PRODUCTION CENTRE

With a robust indigenous parts industry supporting
assemblers, the impact of booming production runs deep and wide.

"This is a very labour-intensive thing," AAPICO's Goh said,
estimating that each new plant at his company employed about
1,000 people.

Goh estimates the real hourly rate in non-unionised Thailand
is just $10, a fraction of the estimated $76 at bankrupt U.S.
auto parts supplier Delphi Corp. when loaded with
pension, health and other liabilities.

"America and Europe are not a place for manufacturing any
more," he said.

While successful brands such as Toyota are building more
factories in the West to meet demand, U.S. giants General Motors
Corp. and Ford Motor Co. are shuttering multiple
plants and shedding tens of thousands of expensive workers.

In Thailand, by contrast, even Ford is looking to boost
output capacity by 30 percent to 200,000 units over the next few
years at its joint-venture plant with Mazda Motor Corp. <7261.T>
to fulfil export as well as domestic demand. The number of
salaried workers will rise to 4,500 from 4,200.

Research firm Global Insight estimates vehicle sales will
total around 709,000 units this year, up 13 percent. By 2010,
most forecasts put domestic vehicle sales at nearly 1 million
vehicles, while the government is targeting production of 1.8
million vehicles that year.



FOREIGN PLANS

Thailand faces competition from China as the favourite
production centre of global auto assemblers. But as long as the
Communist nation retains its strict operational guidelines,
cumbersome red tape and ambitions to create a formidable
national car-making industry, foreign auto makers will continue
to favour Thailand as the regional export base, experts say.

Thanks to its policy of nurturing the local auto supplies
sector, Thailand is the world's second-largest producer of small
one-tonne pick-up trucks, behind only the United States,
exporting vehicles to 140 nations. Vehicles and auto parts
account for nearly one-tenth of total exports.

Toyota, Thailand's top vehicle producer and supplier,
expects to add 3,500 jobs to its headcount of about 9,000
factory workers by 2007, when output capacity is due to reach
550,000 units a year from 360,000 units now.

Japan's second-largest auto maker Nissan Motor Co. <7201.T>
will more than double its workforce to 4,000 from 1,800 by 2008,
when annual production will quadruple to 200,000 units.

Other players like South Korea's Hyundai Motor Co.
<005380.KS>, which exited Thailand after the Asian currency
crisis in the late 1990s, and India's Tata Motors Ltd.
are also eyeing a manufacturing base in Thailand.










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