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Toymakers aim to buck economic gloom at Asia fair
by Staff Writers
Hong Kong (AFP) Jan 11, 2012

Japan current account surplus down 85.5% in November
Tokyo (AFP) Jan 12, 2012 - Japan's current account surplus fell 85.5 percent in November as the nation ran a trade deficit due to higher energy costs, government data showed Thursday.

The surplus in the current account, the broadest measure of its trade with the rest of the world, was down year-on-year for the ninth straight month since the March earthquake and tsunami disasters.

The surplus for November stood at 138.5 billion yen ($1.8 billion), with the trade deficit reaching 585.1 billion yen against a surplus of 256.2 billion yen a year earlier, according to data from the finance ministry.

The fall was bigger than the 74 percent drop expected by economists surveyed by Dow Jones and the Nikkei.

Japan has fallen into a trade deficit due to higher prices of fuel as well as a slowdown in global demand and a strong yen, which has further hampered exports.

The current account measures trade in goods, services, tourism and investment.


A smartphone-controlled robot that fires foam bullets and a model of a tyrannosaurus with real bones are among the attractions drawing the crowds at Asia's largest toy show this week.

Aiming to shake off the global economic slowdown, about 2,000 exhibitors from 43 countries are displaying their wares at the Hong Kong Toys and Games Fair, the second largest in the world and now in its 38th year.

The 30 centimetre (one foot) plastic "iDroid" robot sports wraparound glasses that light up when controlled by smartphone systems via Bluetooth.

"The concept came about one day when we were thinking how to incorporate the latest technology with something fun for the kids," Eddie Yu, chief marketing officer of the robot's maker, Hong Kong-based Globalactive Technology Ltd, told AFP.

"Everyone has a smartphone these days, so naturally we thought it could be used to control a cool toy," he said, using his phone to make the robot perform Michael Jackson's Moonwalk to the delight of the young audience.

At other times it fires a toy machine gun at giggling toddlers, swivelling its mechanical arms.

Across the hall, Maja von Hohenzollern, a member of Germany's former royal family, was debuting her line of pink princess baby clothing, accessories and furniture.

Decked out in a sparkling bright pink dress suit, the blue-eyed blonde said: "Every girl deserves to feel like a princess -- a real princess."

"All the items here are based on the things I used as a child," she added.

The fair -- the second biggest after the Spielwarenmesse event in Nuremberg, Germany -- runs until Wednesday, and while it's all fun and games on the inside, manufacturers are having a tougher time outside.

The toy industry, which heavily relies on Chinese factories, has been hit hard by the sluggish US economy and eurozone debt crisis.

Hundreds of toy factories in China have shut down since the 2008 financial crisis. Rising labour and raw material costs in China have added to pressures on manufacturers.

Chinese company Shantou Qunsheng Toys used to have more than 5,000 factories in Guangdong province. The company, which makes cheap board games and plastic toys, said production plants are closing down one by one.

"Sales have dropped so much -- about 30-40 percent just last year," sales manager Maggie Chen told AFP. "Business just keeps going down. It's pretty bad."

"We need to find new markets, outside the US and Europe. Maybe we can find better opportunities in South Africa, South America, the Middle East or Russia."

For Philippe Rousseau, director of French-based company OID Magic, rising costs at mainland Chinese factories have cut profitability for his company.

"Rising wages and prices of product materials have affected us," he said.

Luckily some buyers still have cash to splash.

"People here are willing to spend," said local toymaker Calvin Lam. "We've been experiencing 10-20 percent growth in sales annually."

But not everyone is in a mood to play -- about a dozen demonstrators caused a stir on the first day of the show on Monday, protesting at what they described as a lack of improvement in working conditions at Chinese toy factories.

Waving a giant banner reading "Toy Un-Fair", the protesters accused major Chinese toy suppliers to US firms of violating labour rights.

"Excessive overtime hours, poor work safety standards and the lack of social insurance at these factories are only some of the things US companies are turning a blind eye to," protester Debbie Chan told AFP.

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China, S. Korea vow to start trade talks
Beijing (AFP) Jan 11, 2012 - Beijing and Seoul have agreed to start formal talks for a free-trade agreement, after a visit by South Korean President Lee Myung-Bak, according to a communique published in state media.

China is South Korea's largest trading partner and two-way trade between the neighbours is expected to reach $300 billion by 2015, the joint communique published in the People's Daily said.

That compares with $224.8 billion in the first 11 months of 2011 and dwarfs trade between China and the impoverished North, which reached $5.2 billion in the same period, official data shows.

"The two sides agreed that signing the free trade agreement as soon as possible would provide a more favourable environment for bilateral trade and economic cooperation," the communique said.

"The two sides agreed to start ... negotiations as soon as the South Korean side finishes its domestic procedures."

South Korea's Yonhap news agency said this week that talks could begin in the first half of this year.

Lee's three-day visit to Beijing, which ended Wednesday, was dominated by concerns over the leadership transition in nuclear-armed North Korea after longtime leader Kim Jong-Il died of a heart attack last month.

China, which has thrown its support behind Kim's son and successor Kim Jong-Un, said it attached "great importance" to Lee's visit and hoped for a revival of the six-way denuclearisation talks, which the North walked out of.

Yonhap, citing a Seoul official, said Lee and his Chinese counterpart Hu Jintao had an "in-depth discussion" on the situation on the Korean peninsula and agreed to "work together" on the thorny issue.

"Maintaining peace and stability on the Korean peninsula and achieving long lasting peace and stability in northeast Asia is in the common interests of all parties," the communique said.



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