Anonymous wrote:You don’t turn 40 years of US corporations sending manufacturing jobs overseas on a dime. There will be a lot more people on food stamps soon enough - oh wait, that program has been cut.
The reason those jobs went overseas in the first place is because wages in the U.S. are too high to maintain a profit margin on manufactured goods. And for many years, corporates also got a tax break for moving the jobs.
So as of this week, the government is demanding that corporates - whose stock prices are decimated - to build new factories immediately in the U.S. and hire people here at South Asian salaries. The manufacturing sector would need Harry Potter’s magic wand to do that.
The answer to improve American training, employment and purchasing power is education to create tech experts with good salaries at scale. But wait, education just got cut too.
If you’re hoping for a rational explanation of all this, it will be tough to find one, other than that breaking a people makes them easier to control.
Anonymous wrote:What Trump and the republicans are doing is communism. Big government control of the economy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Acknowledging the lousy economics of these blanket tariffs, it seems like there will be very disparate impacts across different industries. Those that will benefit directly must:
- have short, domestic supply chains;
- have inelastic demand relative to price;
- be able to get domestic production up and running relatively quickly.
Any thoughts on winners and losers here? A potential winners might be the domestic wine & beer industry - South American and Australian wines have gobbled market share based on low cost. Seems an easy reach to produce more domestic wine. Furniture might be another. The Carolinas used to produce large quantities before cheap Chinese imports took away their market.
Do you have any idea how long it takes to get a furniture factory up and running?
I’d love good quality American furniture again.
There’s plenty of good quality American furniture available. Why aren’t you buying it?
Because it’s not as cheap as the stuff made in Indonesia or Vietnam.
There are two reasons the US lost its manufacturing base: consumers demanding cheap goods and greedy corporations looking to increase profits.
Yeah the whole reason you need a marketing campaign for "buy American" is because there isn't as much selection and the prices are higher - so you have to convince people to get over those two humps.
Won't it be wonderful when we don't have any choice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not true. It was a weird X rumor that took off. There is no pause planned.
Yes this is a 5 year plan. There will be no change of course. The Great Leap Forward is happening!
Anonymous wrote:It is not true. It was a weird X rumor that took off. There is no pause planned.