Orangeburst
Well-Known Member
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- Jun 19, 2008
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I agree with your first paragraph RE horrible execution. And the prior tariffs largely followed procedure I’m pretty sure and were not just unilaterally and arbitrary applied. I’m guessing the penguins of Heard and Macdonald islands still have no idea what they did to draw Trump’s ire.There are still a hundred billion of tariffs in effect that are legal under prior admins, but it takes targetting and not a blanket. Horrible execution, but as stated, if he was just trying to get better trade deals.
I dont think a great nation can be sustainable with $1T trade defictis,without a vibrant mfg sector, and many of these nations are gaming us in mfg. Otherwise, you get a class that demand $25 hour burger wages,
the American consumer needs more choices..looking at anything, the number of choices is mind numbing.If our solution to jobs is to prevent competition then we have our heads up our ass
The plain fact is many industry sectors have gone forever and simply are not coming back. There are likely anecdotal examples of textile products still manufactured in the US however the industry has largely left the nation it simply cannot compete on labor rates.If our solution to jobs is to prevent competition then we have our heads up our ass
Can't make great things? Looks like they make great EV's. We are a consumer based economy and have been for quite some timethe American consumer needs more choices..looking at anything, the number of choices is mind numbing.
there is rules based trade, and then there is China with espionage and industry subsidies.
China cars would wipe out the Big 2-3, steel, and all sorts of mfg.
Like I said you cant be a great power if you cant make anything.
Selling out to a nation that has stolen trillions of just IP isnt wise.
The old sleight about SE Asian mfg just doesn’t hold true anymore in a global economy. The saying used to be cheap Chinese crap. Well that cheap stuff still does exist however so does a bunch of world class manufacturing capacity across all of Asia. In the current global supply chain economy you have mfgrs building product to a design specification. That spec and the industry standard processes referenced determine the quality of the product today not where it was manufacturedCan't make great things? Looks like they make great EV's. We are a consumer based economy and have been for quite some time
The plain fact is many industry sectors have gone forever and simply are not coming back. There are likely anecdotal examples of textile products still manufactured in the US however the industry has largely left the nation it simply cannot compete on labor rates.
Automotive parts is another one largely gone however in that case it didn’t completely travel far since a big chunk come from Mexico and Canada. Again, labor costs.
You tell me. A quick Google ask returned this.How is Canada’s labor cheaper?
You tell me. A quick Google ask returned this.
Yes, labor costs are generally cheaper in Canada than in the U.S., making Canada a more affordable location for business operations. This advantage is driven by lower overall salaries, lower benefit costs due to publicly funded healthcare, and a favorable exchange rate, despite higher average income taxes for employees. [1, 2]
Ok. Well you can go type it into a search engine and reach out to each of the many links stating that yes overall Canada has cheaper labor costs than the US and tell them they’re FOS?I just don’t think that’s accurate. The company that builds our truck bodies is in Canada and they are moving to OH within the next couple of years. I think that labor was cheaper in Canada but I don’t think that’s the case anymore
