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Surfboard makers left high and dry

China tariffs add to their woes, on top of high labour cost and strict regulation­s

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PRESIDENT Donald Trump’s decision to slap 10% tariffs on imported surfboards convinced surf executive Sue Bowers to move factory jobs out of China – but not back to the United States, which was one goal of Trump’s tariffs.

Strict environmen­tal rules and steep labour costs have sent scores of Southern California surfboard manufactur­ers to China. Now, the tariffs have Bowers and other executives searching for factories in places such as Thailand and Vietnam.

“This was Surf City,” said Bowers, general manager of Southern California Sports Industries in Orange County.

“I would like to have our production back here,” said Bowers, whose office/warehouse is decorated with surf legend Mike Doyle’s artwork and filled with surfboards bearing his name.

Instead, Bowers – not a surfer herself but who learned the insand-outs of surfboard constructi­on from Doyle – is joining the growing list of US manufactur­ers and retailers reconfigur­ing supply chains in the wake of the Trump’s bitter trade war with China.

She was among a half dozen US surf company executives who told Reuters they support using trade policy to shelter their homegrown industry from a daunting wave of internatio­nal competitio­n.

They are sceptical, however, about the President’s latest round of tariffs, which on Sept 1 will levy the first US import taxes on surfboards.

“There are way too many things that need to change before we can bring jobs back,” said Bowers, referring to US labour costs and anti-pollution rules governing the use of materials to make surfboards.

Trump delayed putting the 10% duty on cellphones, laptops and other consumer goods in hopes of blunting their impact on US holiday sales. But surfboards and many other products did not win a reprieve.

Southern California was surfing’s epicentre in the late 1950s and early 1960s, spawning a billion-dollar internatio­nal business around surfing’s relaxed, sunsoaked lifestyle.

The forces of globalisat­ion that have eroded the industry were well underway by the turn of the century and the continuing manufactur­ing exodus threatens to wipe out domestic production.

“If something doesn’t happen over the next 10 years (the industry) could cease to be here,” said Shea Weber, chief executive of Dewey Weber Internatio­nal, a surfboard company started by his father – a famous long board “hot-dogger” who appeared in the classic surf documentar­y “Endless Summer”. Dewey Weber still has a factory in San Clemente, California’s “surfboard alley”.

In 2018, surfboard imports hit 916,246, up from 102,850 in 2004, when the US Census Bureau started collecting that trade data. Those imported surfboards now account for upwards of 90% of sales in the small and slow-growing domestic market, experts said.

China accounted for 67% of the surfboards that hit US shores last year.

Critics of Trump’s tariffs say that focusing on just one country encourages manufactur­ers to move jobs to other Asian countries.

Countries like Thailand and Vietnam were already carving out niches on the high and low ends of the market with hourly factory wages that, according to Euromonito­r Internatio­nal data, are roughly half that of China and as much as 19 times lower than in the US.

California-based Firewire, backed by surf superstar Kelly Slater, moved production of its US$500 (RM2,088) to US$1,000plus surfboards to Thailand after shuttering US manufactur­ing in 2008. Taiwan has also edged into the market, building a cult following for its own Wavestorm surfboards that sell at Costco Warehouse Inc and other mass-market stores for as little as US$99 – a price far below what US producers can match.

Nicole Adams, who was testing a borrowed US$200 Wavestorm on a recent Sunday in Venice Beach, is part of a new generation of surfers learning on those wide, soft boards.

“It floats like a boat,” Adams said. — Reuters

 ?? — Reuters ?? Low tide: Surfboard makers are moving their manufactur­ing to other parts of Asia amid new tariffs.
— Reuters Low tide: Surfboard makers are moving their manufactur­ing to other parts of Asia amid new tariffs.

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