|
此文章由 zrobinson 原创或转贴,不代表本站立场和观点,版权归 oursteps.com.au 和作者 zrobinson 所有!转贴必须注明作者、出处和本声明,并保持内容完整
PCB 发表于 2013-9-13 19:17 
原来将近200人现在只剩1-3人。原计划20多个骨干前往上海,但最终只有不到10人愿意前往,其余人全部redund ...
谢谢分享:)
从electronics weekly上看到一篇文章, 说国内的电子生产规模已经占到世界规模的一半了, 这大概也是个原因吧.
下面是文章原文
Good for China; bad for everyone else
no comment david manners 2013/06/27
China accounts for over half of worldwide electronics production, say analysts Semiconductor Intelligence, and China will continue to be the key driver of electronics production growth for at least the next decade.
Electronics production in China in 2012 was over eight times the level in 2000.
But:
US production in 2012 was two-thirds 2000 production.
Japanese 2012 production was only 36% of 2000.
Taiwan’s production in 2012 was the same as in 2000.
In 2012, the $ value of electronics production was $1,100 billion in China, $342 billion in the US and $65 billion in Japan.
In 2000, production was $100 billion in China, $510 billion in the US and $134 billion in Japan.
Semiconductor Intelligence concludes: ‘The mature regions of the US, Japan and Europe are unlikely to show any meaningful growth in electronics production in the next few years, and possibly never again.’
Production of electronic equipment (including computers, communications, consumer, etc.) has been sluggish over the last year in all key regions of the world except for China.
China has maintained growth of over 10% since the beginning of 2011.
The US showed moderate growth until turning negative in October 2012.
Europe turned negative in February 2012 while South Korea has been negative since February 2013.
Japanese electronics production has not recovered since the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami, with mostly double digit declines.
Taiwan and Singapore, each turned from growth to decline in early 2012.
The semiconductor market went negative in July 2011 then turned positive in November 2012 before slipping to a 1.8% decline in April 2013.
Can the semiconductor industry return to growth with only China driving increases in electronics?
The answer, says Semiconductor Intelligence, is probably yes.
See also: Chinese good cheer |
|