BEIJING — The cost of hiring Chinese workers who supply the world with inexpensive furniture and toys is climbing. But workers with more money to spend is good news for foreign companies that see them as customers, not just factory labor.

Areas throughout China have raised local minimum wages and some foreign employers have given out hefty pay hikes. That, combined with an expected rise in China's currency against the dollar this year, will squeeze exporters of clothing and other low-margin goods, possibly forcing thousands to close or move to cheaper countries such as Vietnam.

"It is very difficult for us," said Danny Lau, chairman of the Hong Kong Small and Medium Enterprises Association. He said some 2,000 to 3,000 of an estimated 50,000 Hong Kong-owned factories in southern China's Pearl River Delta, an export hub, might close this year.

But putting more money in workers' pockets will help turn them into consumers and accelerate China's growth as a major market for imports from Boeing jetliners to Brazilian soybeans.

"This is good news. It's going to start driving consumer spending," said Standard Chartered economist Jinny Yan.

Beijing and other Chinese cities have raised minimum wages by up to 20 percent as part of efforts to narrow a yawning income gap that communist leaders worry is fueling political tensions. It was the first rise since the minimum wage was frozen in 2008 to help exporters hold down prices amid the global crisis.

Communist authorities who normally bar independent labor activity have allowed workers to demonstrate and sometimes carry out brief strikes for higher wages.

On Sunday, Taiwanese-owned Foxconn Technology Group announced the second in a series of raises that would increase pay by up to 65 percent at its factories in the southern city of Shenzhen. The company employs 300,000 people there making iPhones and other goods for Apple Inc., Sony Corp., Dell Inc., Nokia Corp. and Hewlett-Packard Co.

The wage hikes fit Beijing's economic strategy, which calls for encouraging China's own consumers to spend more in order to reduce reliance on exports and investment to drive growth.

The ruling party also is trying to shift more money down the economic ladder to defuse public anger that Chinese workers have gotten too little out of a boom that has created dozens of billionaires.

Wages as a share of China's gross domestic product have fallen steadily since the 1980s, from 56.5 percent in 1983 to 36.7 percent in 2005, according to figures from the umbrella group for legally permitted unions, the All-China Federation of Trade Unions, reported by the government newspaper Global Times.

Even at that level, rising incomes made China the biggest auto market last year by vehicles sold and a leading market in industries from air travel to fast food. Retail sales in April were up 18.5 percent from a year earlier.

"Demand is picking up because people have more money in their pockets," said Jing Ulrich, JP Morgan's chairwoman for China equities. She said higher wages could boost demand for products as varied as fast food and sporting goods.

Foreign companies' focus on China as a market was highlighted by a survey released in April by the American Chamber of Commerce in China. It found the top priority for 58 percent of its member companies was producing in China for sale to local consumers. Only 14 percent said their priority was to produce for export.

The wage hikes are likely to hit employers hardest in China's southeast. The area has thousands of factories, many owned by Hong Kong or Taiwanese investors that compete in global markets. Many have razor-thin profit margins and little power to pass on higher costs to customers.

The region was battered in 2008 by the collapse in global consumer spending. Thousands of factories closed and the government said as many as 30 million people were thrown out of work.

Wei Senchuan, general manager of Suzhou Hong Sheng Printing Co. in the eastern city of Suzhou, which makes housings for computers bound for export, said the minimum wage rise will add 6 to 7 percent to his costs.

Asked whether he could pass that on to customers, Wei said, "impossible."

Even after the latest increases, Chinese wages are still a fraction of those in the United States or Europe. Foxconn says pay for its employees in Shenzhen will be about 2,000 yuan ($293) a month.

"We don't see an end to an era of cheap Chinese goods," said Yan of Standard Chartered.

The minimum wage hikes should raise growth in domestic consumption by about 0.2 percentage points this year, according to Jun Ma, chief China economist for Deutsche Bank. He said that would come at the cost of a 0.4 percentage point rise in inflation and a 0.6 percentage point decline in exports.

The wage hikes "will serve as an important impetus to speed up the income distribution reform and economy upgrading," Ma said in a report.

Taiwanese companies had invested an estimated $122 billion and employed 14.4 million people on the mainland as of last year, according to Hung Chia-ko, a researcher at Taiwan's National Chengchi University.

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Some are shifting operations to Southeast Asian nations such as Vietnam and other low-wage economies. But many are too dependent on China's networks of distributors and materials suppliers, say economists and company managers. And even in such places as Vietnam, with 80 million people, the labor pool seems small by comparison.

"Vietnamese workers go on strike every day," said Andrew Yeh, head of the Dongguan Business Association of Taiwan Investors in Dongguan, a city near Hong Kong, and the boss of a company that makes computer cables.

"And you have to be close to the market," Yeh said. "How do you set up your base in Vietnam and export to China?"

Associated Press Writer Annie Huang in Taipei and researcher Bonnie Cao contributed to this report.

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