After eight years, Macro Polo has ceased operations as the Paulson Institute will focus its independent research on supporting its programs as it continues to diversify its scope.
We appreciate the community that has grown around Macro Polo and the fruitful engagement we’ve had with our legion of smart and sharp audience. You’ve pushed us to deliver even more original work and innovative products. Our body of work speaks for itself, and we hope it will have a long shelf life – that was the intent from MP’s inception.
MP’s website is now archived and no new work will be published henceforth on this site. Please visit www.paulsoninstitute.org for future research and policy work on a range of global issues.
Thank you all for the support over the years, it has been a privilege to have had a home at the Paulson Institute and to have built it the way we did.
- Team Macro Polo
The general machinery industry has been an important pillar of China’s rise as a manufacturing powerhouse. These private machinery companies have numerous specializations, ranging from component and precision tool makers to producers of heat exchangers and gearboxes. Their products are used in a diverse array of sectors from agriculture to logistics.
The industry’s growth has outpaced China’s economic growth. In 2016, the industry’s value-added output grew by 9.6%, compared to 6.9% for the overall economy. However, the industry is still replete with low-end manufacturers—fewer than 40% of the core components and materials for general machinery products are made domestically.
As China still relies on imports for high-end machinery, it wants to climb the value-added ladder and find partners and technologies to bolster its domestic machinery industry.
As China’s factor costs, such as labor and raw materials, continue to rise, downstream manufacturers are being forced to acquire machinery with higher efficiency and technological sophistication. The changing environment will incentivize Chinese companies to further venture abroad and acquire know-how from advanced markets with best industry practices.
Zhejiang Dun’an Artificial Environment is primarily engaged in designing and manufacturing HVAC components for both residential and commercial air conditioners. The company in recent years has also started expanding into auto HVAC systems and censors for new energy vehicles. In 2016, 12.1% of its revenue came from exports.
Feng Zhongbo
Hangzhou, Zhejiang
(571) 8711.3798
dazq@dunan.net
Japan, Germany, South Korea, Thailand
DunAn Precision Inc., 12840 Hillcrest Road, Ste E230 Dallas, Texas, 75230. T: 972.239.7540; F: 972.239.7545; E: general.info@dunanUSA.com; http://www.dunanusa.com/
In December 2011, DunAn Environment acquired Microstaq, Inc.—a Texas-based micro electromechanical system manufacturer that specializes in flow control for the HVAC industry—to create DunAn Microstaq. Separately, the Chinese company also set up an R&D facility in California, and a production facility is currently under construction in Texas.
In 2007, the Chinese company established a subsidiary in Thailand, one of its main markets. As of today, the company has invested over $50 million in its plant in Thailand. Between 2014 and 2016, the company established three subsidiaries in Japan, Germany, and South Korea, respectively, which mainly operate as sales platforms. In 2015, DunAn also invested in Germany’s AUBO Robotics Technology Co., Ltd, which specializes in advanced industrial robots.