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Significant shift
But an increasing number of small industrial design companies from across the oceans are heading to China's shores to set up shop, shifting their focus from creating products for international clients, like GE or Siemens, to creating designed-for-China goods.
It marks a potentially significant shift in the way the world views the Chinese market - from a manufacturing and production heartland to world innovator and creator.
"While traditionally China has been primarily concerned with manufacture, as the 1980s and '90s generations mature, you will see more people looking to China as a source of new ideas," said Elliot Richards, author of Eightsix, a design blog focusing on China's creative rise.
Development plan
China first voiced the need for quality creators in 2007, when Premier Wen Jiabao gave instructions "to attach great importance to industrial design". His call was echoed in the long-term scientific and technological development plan (2006-20), which cast industrial design as a necessity for China's economic development.
Wen was foreshadowing China's need to move beyond making goods and start coming up with innovative ideas of their own. He was right.
Since making it a priority in 2006, Chinese industrial design has been showing amazing promise and continues to evolve on a daily basis.
In 2009, China was one of the top product creators, accounting for 50 percent of the world's industrial design filing activity, a 12.8 percent increase from 2008, according to a report from the World Intellectual Property Organization.
This was during a time the other top two patent-filing countries, the US and Japan, showed little growth, with the US remaining almost unchanged, and Japan showing a 10.8 percent decrease in the number of patents filed.
Coupled with a whirlwind of new Chinese design schools - in the past 10 years more than 1,000 design schools have been opened across the country, sending talent trained at home by the thousands into an eager job market.
A stunning shift considering in the 1980s there were less than 10 design programs nationwide.
"Back in China 15 plus years ago, the concept of industrial design probably did not even come to mind to the average business owner," said Joseph Lam, business strategy manager at S.point Design, a Shanghai-based industrial design company.
As a result of their efforts, the industry in China has boomed.
Creative hubs
Industrial design "villages", massive creative hubs where several design companies share a space, often at subsidized prices, have popped up across the country as China endeavors to create its own Silicon Valley.
In Beijing alone, there are more than 250,000 jobs in industrial design, generating more than 80 billion yuan ($12.6 billion) in revenues each year, according to information provided by the Beijing Center for Industrial Design.
Compare this to the UK Design Council's most recent statistics that put the total number of jobs classified as industrial design in the UK at 25,520, generating roughly 157 billion yuan ($25 billion) annually.
In the US, the numbers are similar, with the Department of Labor reporting a total of around 40,800 jobs in industrial design nationwide.
Staggering difference
While statistics on the industrial design as a whole are difficult to come by, if the numbers speak half the truth, the size difference between China and the West is staggering.
"(China) adapts to new technologies insanely fast - and this ability will help them to succeed. One day, they will surely manage it," said Vec from Red Dot Design.
But rapid growth is always beset with issues and creativity is rarely a skill measured by sheer numbers cannot be force. There remains much work to be done for China to achieve its target of being truly innovative.
While the design industry may outnumber that found in the US or Europe, the quality and ingenuity of product design still has yet to come to fruition.
"Chinese companies are just now coming around to the value of in-depth design," said Clive Roux, CEO of the Industrial Design Society of America.
"Most Chinese designers currently are focused too much on the aesthetic aspect of it, and they don't understand the deeper elements of design."
Roux, who spent seven years working as a design director for Phillips electronics in Hong Kong during the 1990s and still makes several visits to China annually, said that while there remains a lot of room for the Chinese industry to advance, it has made improvements.
"Where Chinese designers have really improved is in the tactics of design - the use of form and materials, color and texture. The sort of lower level tactical things you can do to help a company make their products more appealing," he said.
"Where I've seen them really lagging is in researching consumers and getting to the level of helping the company to figure out what their products should be based on the consumer."
The current focus on simply improving aesthetic design, rather than the function of the products themselves, limits the level of innovation going into new designs, he said.