The U.S. Furniture Industry
Saturday, 15 December 2007
U.S. furniture industry usually grows about 7% to 8% a year; this year it's expected to jump only 3%, from $84.6 billion in
revenue last year to $87.1 billion this year.
By Al Schuler & Steve Lawser
In the United States, furniture and related manufacturing (including kitchen cabinets) is currently concentrated in three
geographic locations: the Midwest (Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Wisconsin, Illinois), the South (North Carolina, Mississippi,
Virginia) and the Southwest (California, New Mexico, Texas).
Today, the top 12 producing states manufacture about two-thirds of the furniture and kitchen cabinets produced in the
United States.
There is a growing dichotomy in the "furniture industry." The furniture industry, excluding the kitchen cabinet sector, lost
108,000 jobs or 21 percent of its workforce between 1997 and 2005. Only two sectors within the U.S. furniture industry -
kitchen cabinets and office furniture - have shown growth in terms of employees, payroll and value of shipments.
For example, between 1997 and 2005*, the value of shipments for kitchen cabinets more than doubled (up 111 percent),
office furniture shipments increased 22 percent, upholstered furniture shipments increased a modest 27 percent;
institutional furniture shipments increased a meager 9 percent while shipments of nonupholstered furniture (i.e., wood
furniture) actually fell 7 percent. The reason for this disparity is competition from cheaper imports has impacted the
household furniture sector, particularly wood household furniture.
In essence, imported wood furniture from Canada and offshore sources, particularly China, captured most of the growth
in the wood furniture market during the past seven years. Demand was driven in large part by the phenomenal growth in
residential construction over this period, but domestic manufacturers did not share in the "good times."
LESS SPENDING ON FURNITURE
Consumers are mainly interested in furniture that looks good and appears to be a good value. No longer do they look at
furniture as a long-term investment as something to pass on to their children or keep as an antique. As a result, the
consumer is spending less and less on furniture. There is also more competition for the consumer's dollar from electronic
gadgets, home entertainment, travel and leisure products. Because of this emphasis on price, profit margins for U.S.
furniture manufacturers are extremely low, while the costs of manufacturing continue to rise. This has created a severe
profit squeeze that has led to a significant decline in plant and equipment investments. As a result, many U.S. furniture
plants are not up-to-date with the latest technology and equipment.
Many U.S. furniture manufacturers are choosing to have their furniture made in China and other low-cost countries rather#p#分頁標題#e#
than produce their own products. This has allowed offshore furniture competitors to increase their penetration into United
States and world markets. If this does not change, most U.S. household furniture will be made offshore as U.S. furniture
manufacturers continue to close their domestic manufacturing operations and become wholesalers and/or retailers. As
offshore manufacturers gain more experience from supplying U.S. furniture manufacturers, they will learn enough to go
around them and sell direct to retailers, or through their own retail distribution outlets. This is already happening as most
of the larger Chinese furniture manufacturers sell direct to retailers and some are offering retail franchises in the United
States.
THE IMPACTS OF GLOBALIZATION
Globalization impacted trade in the furniture subsector has taken a distinct turn for the worse for U.S. manufacturers, with
the kitchen cabinet industry group more recently experiencing the beginning of a downturn in growth as well. Between
1992 and 2005, imports of all furniture products (including household, institutional and office furniture, but excluding
kitchen cabinets) increased from $4.1 billion to $23.65 billion in 2005, an increase of almost $20 billion or 477 percent.
During this period, imports from China increased from $208 million to $10.8 billion, an increase of almost $11 billion - a
fifty-fold increase in 13 years.
Imports now comprise 28 percent of all furniture consumption (excluding kitchen cabinets), up from 9 percent 13 years
ago. In sectors where wood is the predominant material input, the loss of market share is equal, or in some cases, more
substantial. Fifty-five percent of the wood household furniture, 11 percent of kitchen cabinets; 19 percent of the
upholstered market; and 21 percent of the wood office furniture market consumed in the United States in 2005 consisted
of imports.
Since the wood household furniture sector has been the most ravaged by imports, the major sources of imports is China.
Chinese imports have increased 525 percent since 1998 - that's more than a six-fold increase in just eight years. A major
reason for this rapid increase is that the Taiwanese furniture industry, with its management expertise, capital, knowledge
of the U.S. market, and other pertinent expertise, relocated to mainland China beginning in the early 1990s.
TURKOFAMERICA
IMPORT TRENDS
Taiwan was a major manufacturer and exporter of wood furniture to the United States; however, as their standard of
living increased, their furniture manufacturing costs, particularly the labor component, increased significantly and they
were no longer as competitive as they once were. Thus, a "manufacturing capacity migration" is occurring in East and
Southeast Asia from Taiwan (and to some extent mainland China) to Vietnam.
Wood furniture exports to the United States from Vietnam have increased from $1 million to $753 million in just five#p#分頁標題#e#
美國留學(xué)生dissertationyears. In fact, Vietnam is now the third largest exporter of wood household furniture to the United States, behind China
and Canada - predictions point to it surpassing Canada within five years.
The common denominator for most of these industries is too much focus on production and not enough attention paid to
the customer - i.e., a commodity mentality. Not a good strategy unless you are the "low-cost producer" or have some
other competitive advantages that serve to balance the scales for companies that have a higher cost structure. Some
examples include: superior service; customization at competitive prices; faster delivery; better credit terms; lean and
flexible manufacturing; expert marketing and knowledge of your key customers; and superior quality.
* Al Schuler is a research economist with the USDA Forest Service. /
* Steve Lawser serves as the executive director of the Wood Components Manufacturers Association (WCMA).
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