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This compares to a loss of pounds 20

14 Aug Posted by admin in General | Comments

This compares to a loss of pounds 20.4m in the first half last year.
Spring Ram is expected to break even at the pre-tax level in the full year and make a profit of pounds 5.5m-pounds 6m in 1998. Spring Ram, the kitchens and bathrooms business being nursed back to health by Roger Regan, reported its first operating profit for three years yesterday as the company expressed cautious optimism about the future. Though each division reported an improved trading performance, the group still made a pre-tax loss of pounds 1.4m in the six months to 28 June due to interest charges on debts which were down to pounds 29m at the half year stage. The half-year operating profit of pounds 100,000 on sales of pounds 116.5m is the first trading surplus since 1994, the year after Bill Rooney, the company’s co-founder, left the group as part of a boardroom clear-out. But it is they, not the well- heeled West, that should be worrying most about the developing giants..

That is just what China can do, except cheaper still and and on a bigger scale. Past experience suggests that countries like Thailand, Malaysia and Singapore can overcome such challenges. They would be getting something pretty badly wrong if they could not grow fast enough for their GDP to catch up with countries like Britain.
Size is irrelevant; what matters is wealth per capita. More worrying is the possibility that integration of countries like China into the world economy will cut either employment or wages within the OECD, especially for people in unskilled jobs.

Again, however, it is probably not worth getting unduly concerned. As The World Bank pointed out in yesterday’s annual report, the more the developing countries produce and grow, the more of our exports they buy, and the better it is for everybody. We get cheaper clothes imported from China, making us better off as consumers, and they buy more of our goods with the revenues, making us better off as workers.The people who really have something to fear from increased competition with the Big Five are people living in smaller countries outside the charmed circle of the OECD. The smaller south east Asian tigers in particular have based their economic miracle on exports of cheap manufactured goods. In the UK for instance, in the feverish run-up to the general election, there was uproar about a leaked Treasury document that predicted that some of the biggest developing countries would soon overtake some developed economies in terms of size, the UK among them.

 


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