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by Renaud Anjoran
If you have done regular business with Chinese suppliers, you have certainly noticed how eager they are to push prices up. And you probably felt like you got cheated several times.
In this article I am going to focus on cases where the supplier increases the price of an order he already accepted — a very upsetting situation for the buyer.
I think it works out this way most of the time:
I heard many types of excuses over the years. Here are a few:
I can see a new excuse coming up soon, from those factories that are polluting: “we have to pay for carbon quotas”. (Pilot programs were just launched in several Chinese cities, and a list of 634 polluting companies were given targets and allowances last month). Get prepared!
As I wrote above, many times the reason involved is a joke. And, to be sure, the supplier never comes back to the buyer with a price decrease when components get cheaper. It only goes one way — up!
It means there is a lot of insincerity, and importers feel that. BUT there are reasons why prices often need to be raised:
If you really do not want to suffer a price increase for a current order, I see five solutions:
If this problem happened to you and you did not take any of the above-mentioned measures, the best is to gather some information first. You can pretend that you need to inspect the components before taking a decision. If you see that they have already received some components that will be hard to use for another customer of theirs, you are in a stronger negotiating position.
If you want to mitigate price increases in the mid-to-long term, though, the best is to cultivate a few backup factories that will put pricing pressure on your main suppliers.
Should buyers really try to contain price increases?
I would avoid dealing with these issues in a “this is what you signed and there is no way you can change these terms” fashion. Refusing a price increase is actually dangerous.
As Dan Harris wrote a few months back:
Your Chinese manufacturer will either go back to you and ask to be able to raise its prices in light of its greatly increased costs for Stainless Steel or it will secretly start replacing some of the stainless steel in your widget. Which would you prefer?
That is a real danger, I think. Do you agree?
Renaud Anjoran is the founder of Sofeast Quality Control and helps importers to improve and secure their product quality in China. He writes advice for importers on the Quality Inspection blog. He lives full time in Shenzhen, China. You can contact him at info@sofeast.com.
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