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When
motorists drive through Martinsville in Southside
Virginia, one of the first things they see are cow-sized
multicolored dinosaurs, all modeled loosely in the
shape of a brontosaurus. The fake dinosaurs on downtown
streets hawk a bone exhibit at a local museum, but
local wags see something else. Once the T-Shirt
capital of the world, Martinsville's mighty apparel
industry has been decimated by foreign competition.
The current fear is that the other stalwart of local
industry - furniture - may go the way of the dinosaur,
too. For years, Martinsville and other Virginia
cities have boasted of many name-brand companies
such as Bassett, Hooker and Stanley. These venerable
firms and their counterparts in North Carolina just
across the state line took advantage of plentiful
hardwoods nearby and the finely honed skills of
local woodworkers to make their region the center
of fine furniture manufacturing in the U.S. Today
the same global economic forces that have pushed
clothing factories to such cheap-labor countries
as Mexico and Guatemala are threatening the furniture
makers.
The
biggest challenge yet is China, which won enormous
new clout last fall when it was admitted into the
World Trade Organization. China already has a huge,
cheap and hard-working labor force, but some say
the WTO gives it special advantages in tariffs,
making it easier to export its goods and attract
foreign imports and co-production agreements with
foreign furniture makers - all at the expense of
Virginia furniture makers.
China
represents the largest increase in imports through
the giant port of Hampton Roads, and furniture leads
the list. "We anticipate very significant increases
in furniture components, especially accessories
such as tables, chairs and lamps. The pace and the
volume have quickened very rapidly," says Robert
Armbruster, regional manager of China Shipping North
America in Norfolk, a major Chinese-owned shipping
agent.
Yet
as they try to shore up their defenses, Virginia's
furniture makers, like others in the U.S., face
another dilemma that, if not addressed, will seriously
hamstring them if not prove their undoing. The industry,
some analysts say, has become lax in service and
needs to restructure and streamline its product
lines. Gary Shoesmith, a professor at the Babcock
Graduate School of Management at Wake Forest University,
is among those who say the furniture industry needs
an overhaul. "A huge amount of restructuring
is due over the next 10 to 20 years," he said.
"Service is horrible. I recently ordered a
mirror and it took them eight months to deliver
it. Eventually something like that will need to
come in in eight days, not eight months."
Some
Virginia companies have heeded the call, however.
Trying to blunt imports and survive, they are meeting
with suppliers to insure timely deliveries and high
quality, or opening their own stores to tighten
control and speed up shipping.
Unless
they take such measures, the alternative could be
much worse. The pain is already spreading throughout
Southside. For example, Bassett Furniture Industries,
one of several companies near Martinsville, closed
three plants last year, sending more than 1,000
people to the unemployment line. Pulaski Furniture
Co., based in Pulaski, has operated a plant in Martinsville
since 1960. The firm closed shop and left Martinsville
in 2000.
The
plight of the furniture industry stretches throughout
the nation and the worst is yet to come, analysts
say. Last year, the total value of imported furniture
products in the U.S. stood at $12 billion, which
represented a 1 percent growth from the previous
year.
That
may not sound like much, but the furniture industry
saw a decline of 10 percent during the same year
- so even in a recession imports were growing and
capturing more of the market. Over the past five
years, imports have grown at an annualized rate
of 15.6 percent. Jerry Epperson, of the Richmond-based
investment-banking firm of Mann, Armistead &
Epperson, says imports accounted for 43 percent
of the wood products and 13 percent of the upholstery
products sold in the United States last year, up
from 29 percent and 7 percent in just five years.
"We just went through the worst recession the
furniture industry has had since World War II,"
Epperson says. "We had over a 10 percent decline
(in sales) last year." But imports from China
were up 15 percent during the same period - growing
even when the rest of the industry was in decline.
China
has come to this point very quickly. Just 11 years
ago China was barely a blip on the radar screen,
accounting for a mere $98 million in imports. What's
more, according to Art Raymond, president of A.G.
Raymond and Co, a furniture industry consulting
firm in Raleigh, N.C., imports of furniture from
China saw a drop in prices last year, so the actual
amount of Chinese furniture sold in the United States
may have grown even more - perhaps as much as 25
percent. "China accounted for one-third of
the imports, $4.2 billion," he said.
The
onslaught of the Middle Kingdom is costing thousands
of jobs nationwide. Last year the furniture industry
lost nearly 10 percent of its work force nationwide,
with work rolls dropping from 247,000 jobs in 2000
to 222,000 last year. "Another way to look
at it is to look at what the Labor Department calls
a mass layoff," says Raymond. "A mass
layoff is when 50 or more people are let go. Last
year we had 122 mass layoffs, which generally represented
a plant being closed. The average for the five years
prior to that was 43." Hard times are still
ahead. "I'd say we'll see at least another
10 percent drop, maybe more, in the next 12 months.
A 10 to 15 percent drop
I just don't think
we've hit bottom yet."
As
bad as the numbers are, Raymond says there's a hidden
havoc to increasing imports - ancillary industries
are also taking a hit. "The hardwood sawmill
business was off about 35 percent last year. That
business has lost employees and plant workers,"
as have other industries, including "the veneer
people, the machinery industry," and others.
"When you start putting that in there, you
can multiply that loss by at least a factor of 2,
if not more."
Both
Epperson and Raymond say the situation will get
worse for domestic-based furniture manufacturing
as China and other Pacific Rim nations invade the
market. Both analysts agree that trade agreements
have little to do with the increase in imports.
According to them, the driving force behind the
switch to imports is simply the continuation of
a trend, with furniture manufacturers seeking out
the lowest labor cost available. Abundant and cheap
labor was available in New England. As the job markets
there diversified and labor became more expensive,
furniture makers moved their operations to western
New York state and Michigan, Epperson says. When
the labor force there became unionized, the manufacturing
base migrated south, settling in Virginia and North
Carolina, where labor was cheap, plentiful, and
the Appalachians were full of good, solid wood to
be harvested.
Now,
Raymond says, the furniture industry is simply moving
to "the ultimate source of cheap labor, China."
In the U.S., the typical worker may make $10 to
$11 an hour, but the hourly rate for China is about
50 cents per hour. He notes that China enjoys most
favored trading status with the United States, so
its products already come into this country tariff-free,
and the nation's entrance into the World Trade Organization
will have little practical effect on the industry.
Shoesmith,
of Wake Forest, disagrees with that assessment.
Over the past 10 years, the industry has lost a
third of its workers, he says, and the North American
Free Trade Agreement with Mexico and Canada made
the problem worse. "This business with China
and the WTO is going to be much worse," Shoesmith
says. "China is going to be a formidable competitor.
Furniture is a 'chosen' industry that will receive
significant government subsidies. They will subsidize
and promote, and the quality of their goods is going
to be very high. In the U.S. if you have three workers
spot checking, in China you will have 30 inspectors
checking and still have a much lower price."
Whether
it's due to China's membership in the WTO, or just
a continuation of the present trend, many in the
industry agree China will be a force to reckon with.
And even China eventually may be supplanted, to
a degree, by Vietnam. As Vietnam becomes more accepted
as a global trading partner, China will feel the
threat of new imports, says Raymond. "As cheap
as labor is in China, it's only about a quarter
of that in Vietnam," he says. The furniture
industry, he reiterates, will follow that cheap
labor, "whether it's China, Vietnam, or one
day Africa."
The
threat of imports has, to some extent, lit a fire
under the furniture industry. One key for furniture
makers, Epperson says, is to change the way they
do business with their business partners. Vaughan-Bassett
is doing just that, he says.
The
company's CEO, John Bassett, says one simple but
important step he has taken is meeting with 200
key suppliers to smooth relations and address problems.
"That's the first time we've met with them
in 40 years," Bassett says. "Basically,
what I told them was that we're not in a recession.
Recessions come and go, but what we're facing today
is what we've never faced before, and that's global
competition."
Bassett
was armed with all the statistics - the dropping
furniture sales, the growing import figures, the
effects plant closings have on the suppliers to
those companies. "I told them, 'If you want
me to be a world-class customer, you have to be
a world-class supplier.' They've got to be part
and parcel of this.
We (in the furniture
industry) can't do this by ourselves."
The
results were positive. Bassett acknowledges that
his suppliers are now giving his company better
prices, the best quality they can and they have
increased the speed of shipments.
Another
industry trend is for furniture companies to get
into the retail business themselves. Ethan Allen,
with its large retail stores, is a premier example.
"Go to an Ethan Allen store," says Raymond.
"Compare that to most any other furniture store,
the experience you have there. The sales people
are well-trained; they understand their product.
The atmosphere inside the showroom is way above
what it is in most stores. I think that affects
the ability of Ethan Allen to charge a premium price
for what they are selling."
Bassett
Furniture Co. has leapt into company stores in a
big way. Opening its first Bassett Direct Store
in 1994, the Martinsville-based firm now owns or
has licensed 78 of the stores nationwide. Jay Moore,
director of corporate communications, says the company
has tighter control over the shopping experience
customers have in a Bassett Direct Store. The result,
say company officials, is better sales. Company
stores also help Bassett streamline production,
making it easier for shoppers to get what they want,
faster. "Say you want a sofa. You can pick
the back, the arms, the legs, and we promise to
have it in your home in 30 days or it's free,"
says Moore.
Hooker
Furniture Co., also based in Martinsville, started
preparing for the Asian onslaught earlier than other
companies. "Fifteen years ago we actually began
to import," says Kim D. Shaver, director of
marketing and communications. Clyde Hooker, the
company's leader from 1950 until his retirement
in 2000, saw the growing influence of imports as
inevitable, says Shaver. By using selective imports,
she says, the company is able to focus on its core
products - entertainment centers and home office
furniture. The firm's officials studied how these
products were produced in the factories and did
what it could to make the process as efficient as
possible. At the same time, company officials didn't
concern themselves with holding onto production
of all the accessories - coffee tables, end tables
and other smaller pieces. The focus, says Shaver,
was to "protect our niche in the market while
complementing it with imported pieces."
That
strategy is paying off, she believes. "None
of our six domestic factories have closed, nor do
we have any plans to close," she says. "In
fact, over the past eight months, prior to summer,
we have been working full time and even selected
overtime in some of those plants."
Despite such moves, analysts say that the future
of U.S. furniture manufacturing will boil down to
its ability to deliver products with speed. Even
Bassett Furniture's 30-day sofa guarantee may not
be fast enough, Raymond says. "The upholstery
process is a lot easier to streamline, because many
of the upholstery guys have converted to plywood
frames, instead of hardwood frames, and they're
making them to order rather than making them for
inventory. That's a much leaner and more streamlined
process." While in the not-too-distant past
furniture deliveries could be measured in months,
today it's generally measured in weeks, but double-digit
weeks are not uncommon.
That
still may not be fast enough, some analysts believe.
Shoesmith and others say that a top-to-bottom streamlining
and restructuring is needed if furniture is to survive.
"Some company will eventually figure out how
to streamline their product lines. They'll make
20 couches rather than 80 couches and that will
satisfy 80 percent of their customers," he
says. While it isn't clear how much Virginia's furniture
industry needs to retool, one point is obvious.
If more steps aren't taken to meet and best foreign
competition, motorists of the future driving through
Martinsville may find old pieces of American-made
furniture sitting next to the street-side dinosaurs.
Return
to Virginia Business - August 2002