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The enlightenment of Helen Hai

Updated: 2014-02-21 09:54
By Wang Chao and Andrew Moody ( China Daily Africa)

 The enlightenment of Helen Hai

Helen Hai says that the advantage in manufacturing has already shifted from the West to China. Photos provided to China Daily

A lesson about money and wealth learned as a girl has guided a businesswoman in her approach to life

Iis not as though Helen Hai is exactly hard up for cash. Hai, 36, was paid a decent salary and has a successful husband working in private equity. "If I stop working, I don't need to worry about money," she says.

But Hai chooses to work from dawn till dusk in Ethiopia. She is dedicated to the place and owns an apartment in Addis Ababa, the country's capital.

She wound up in Ethiopia by accident: in 2011, Hai, who planned to start her own shoe brand, met the president of Huajian, one of the biggest shoe makers in China. The president offered her the position of vice-president at Huajian, and said he wanted her to start a factory in Ethiopia.

Hai opened a factory in Addis Ababa just three months after joining the company. Within six months, she doubled the export volume to Europe and North America, she says. The factory has taken on more than 3,000 local workers, and Hai says Huajian plans to create 100,000 more jobs in Africa.

Hai has become such a big shot in Ethiopia that when the prime minister paid a state visit to China, he invited her to travel with him on his private plane.

"He told me 'I really appreciate your contribution to the country in the past two years, but in order to develop, we need hundreds of thousands of companies like Huajian to come here'."

Hai, who likes wearing neat Chanel jackets, looks like a tough tiger woman: slim figure, fair skin, wavy hair, speaks fast and frowns when she talks.

But she remembers softer moments. She often recalls her first day in Ethiopia, when she took a walk in the rose garden of the Sheraton, Addis Ababa, the best hotel in the capital. She looked through the beautiful rose bushes and saw curious faces of street people peeping through the fence. At that moment, she suddenly flashed back to her childhood, when her father took her to Beijing and wanted to stay in a five-star hotel to celebrate her seventh birthday.

"I remember very clearly when we checked in, my father asked how much a room is, and they said '$100'. My father said immediately: 'it's too expensive', and took me out of the hotel. At that moment I turned my head around and saw all the European people in the lobby. I thought: this is a completely different world."

Hai began to wonder: outside the fence, the local people who cannot afford to stay at a five-star hotel, do they have the same feeling as she did nearly 30 years ago?

Hai always stresses that she is lucky to be a beneficiary of China's reform and opening up. Born in Changchun, Jilin province, in 1978, she climbed the ladder to become the youngest chief actuary in Britain; then vice-president of Huajian shoe company in Ethiopia; and now the Chinese consultant to the Ethiopian government.

"I did a lot of thinking in the Sheraton garden: Because of the development of China, my life has changed dramatically. Here in Ethiopia, outside the gate of the Sheraton, a lot of girls' lives will also change dramatically when they are 35 years old, with their country's economy taking off."

After graduating from a foreign language school in Changchun, Hai went to England to study at City University in London and later became an actuary in the British capital. In 2007, she accepted a senior position at Zurich financial services as the vice-president and chief actuary for China operations.

But Hai's ambition goes beyond money and power.

"Many people ask me, why did you come to Africa? I was born in the 1970s, and people who were born about that time don't believe in God or Buddha, even Communism. I represented a typical group of people working hard but, after a certain stage, also looking for a purpose."

She found her purpose by accident: Right after she started the shoe factory in Ethiopia, she met Justin Lin, chief economist for the World Bank, who told her: "What you are doing here is just business, you need to make it into a development case".

"This is when I realized the significance of what I was doing," she says.

The following month, Lin invited her to the World Bank to give a speech. At that time, everyone was talking about the "Washington Concensus", and few bought Lin's theory. "With my example of Huajian, people began to believe him," Hai says.

During her first two years in Ethiopia, Hai built good relations with the prime minister and ministers. "We share the same goal of demonstrating that Africa can be a manufacturer for the world, and I can also contribute to the continent's global platform."

Hai is now working with Lin to attract more labor-intensive business to Africa.

"I have already experienced a lot of things in Europe. If I can leverage everything I know about China and the West and make some successful development cases in Africa, then I can play a tiny role."

But Hai is not just an idealist. She sounds exactly like a rational actuary when she tries to persuade Chinese entrepreneurs to come to Africa: "In order to make Africa the manufacturing center, there must be opportunities to make a profit. Although the logistics cost is 8 percent, four times the amount in China, labor is just 2 percent of production costs compared with 22 percent in China, so it is still much more profitable."

Besides, Europe and the US allow imports of some products from Africa free of taxes, including shoes, which adds to the profit.

"This advantage in manufacturing has already shifted from the West to China," Hai says. "The West doesn't really have it anymore with this type of operation. What we are doing is combining Chinese know-how with competitive labor," Hai says.

Contact the writers through wangchao@chinadaily.com.cn

 The enlightenment of Helen Hai

Helen Hai with Prime Minister of Ethiopia, Hailemariam Desalegn.

(China Daily Africa Weekly 02/21/2014 page29)

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