Foreign technology is very developed, why not as strong as domestic manufacturing?

China is big but not strong, which is half right. It is true that some China manufactures have a large output and high operating income, but their output value and profits are very low.

20 17 in the first quarter, China brand mobile phones accounted for 48% of the world, which means that for every two mobile phones that people buy, one is China brand. But when it comes to output value and profit, mobile phones in China account for less than 48%.

In 20 16, apple sold 2150,000 iphone, accounting for 4.6% of the global/kloc-0. China's top three Huawei+OPPO+vivo mobile phone sales in 2065,438+05.7 million units, accounting for 265,438+0.6% of the world; In 20 16 years, Samsung sold 311000000 mobile phones, accounting for 2 1.2% of the world.

But compared with revenue, Apple's revenue from iphone in 20 16 was139.4 billion dollars; The revenue of Samsung's mobile division is $89.4 billion, and Huawei +OPPO+VIVO has not announced the revenue of a single mobile phone. Huawei's consumer business revenue is 654.38+07.8 billion RMB, 25.8 billion USD (exchange rate is 6.9), and the revenue of OPPO and VIVO is about 20 billion USD (estimated value, VIVO is lower than OPPO), so it is the sum of the three.

It can be seen that the amount is larger than others, but the income is lower than others, the income is not comparable, and the output value and profit are even less comparable. This can be called big but not strong.

Next, the countries and South Africa that ranked first in the GDP of the World Bank in 20 16 15 explained the situation. Why are the top 15 GDO and South Africa? Because Mexican GDP ranks 15, the total economic output is only 9.34% of China's, less than one tenth of China's, and countries after 15 have no comparative significance because of their large volume gap; South Africa, as the only BRIC country whose GDP is not in the top 15, is also a well-known emerging country, so it joins the comparative industry; South Korea has no data on manufacturing added value in official website of the World Bank.

The status of the United States as an economic superpower remains unshakable, with the European Union ranking second as a whole and China steadily narrowing the gap between the first and second places. The GDP of the United States still ranks first in the world, far ahead of other countries, at 18.04 trillion US dollars. Followed by the European Union, about 16 trillion US dollars. China followed closely, with GDP of 1 1 trillion dollars, and Japan ranked fourth with 4.38 trillion dollars. It can be seen that in terms of GDP, the United States, the European Union and China have become the first group, leaving other countries and regions far behind. Mexico ranks 15, only about 5% of the United States.

Among the major industrialized countries in the world, the industrial output value of China, the United States, Japan and Germany ranks in the top four in the world, and China ranks first in the world. In 20 15, the added value of global manufacturing industry was $65,438+0.2157 trillion, and that of China was $3.25 trillion. The United States ranks second in the world, 2. 142 trillion US dollars; In Japan, the third in the world, the added value of manufacturing in 20 15 was $892.476 billion; Germany ranks fourth in the world, and the added value of 20 15 manufacturing industry is $700.88 billion. The added value of manufacturing industry in 20 15 years is 1. 15 times that of China. Judging from the added value of the whole manufacturing industry, the scale of China's manufacturing industry is already the first in the world, which is worthy of recognition.

The per capita manufacturing output value is obtained by dividing the added value of manufacturing industry by the total population, while the comparison of per capita manufacturing output value is to set China as 1, and the per capita manufacturing output value of other countries is divided by the per capita manufacturing output value of China, so that it is convenient to compare the per capita output value of various countries and measure their manufacturing level.