Somehow I get the feeling you're talking to the wall.Glocksman wrote: Competiting with countries where the average wage is less than a dollar a day and there are no environmental or labor laws is something else.

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Yeah, it is. And that's why you impose reasonable tariffs and taxes. You don't move to quash them out right. But you'd also better be pushing hard to get your industry in as good a shape as possible. The idea is to give them a chance, not a to give them a free ride.Glocksman wrote:Reasonable competition is healthy.
Competitng with the EU or other First world countries is one thing.
Competiting with countries where the average wage is less than a dollar a day and there are no environmental or labor laws is something else.
Ah, but we should not be directly competing with such countries. Countries like that generally don't have skilled workforces, after all, and a first-world nation should not be in the business of manufacturing in such a low-tech manner that it can be performed by unskilled labour.Glocksman wrote:Reasonable competition is healthy.
Competitng with the EU or other First world countries is one thing.
Competiting with countries where the average wage is less than a dollar a day and there are no environmental or labor laws is something else.
I have a college degree and make less than $14 an hour. Granted I'm not working in my degree field, which pays even less, but I am in a somewhat skilled field.Wicked Pilot wrote:I have a college degree and I make about $20 an hour. If somebody thinks they should make $25 for simply turning a screw on an assembly line, well think again.
Tsyroc wrote:I have a college degree and make less than $14 an hour. Granted I'm not working in my degree field, which pays even less, but I am in a somewhat skilled field.Wicked Pilot wrote:I have a college degree and I make about $20 an hour. If somebody thinks they should make $25 for simply turning a screw on an assembly line, well think again.
More on topic. Back in the 80's I lived in the Quad Cities (Iowa/Illinois) right when a bunch of the labor unions screwed themselves out of jobs. One guy I knew was making $36 an hour with nothing but a high school education. I'm not sure what his job was but I know that his company, Caterpillar closed the plant and moved to France. You know something is wrong with your manufacturing/business practices if moving the plant to France is an improvement.
Anyone remember the cartoon from the Klinton years?TrailerParkJawa wrote: This is a good example from both Wicked Pilot and Tsyroc. I bet 20 dollars an hour is a decent wage in Florida, and 14 is okay in Arizona not the best. Where I live 20 bucks and hour is the minimum wage required to afford a 1 bedroom / economy car lifestyle
In my state the road workers who holds the STOP/GO signs makes 30 dollars and hour and the flagmen get something like 45 all because its hazardous duty. The job requirements are a high school diploma and a six or so week training course. You know I can understand people like telephone linemen making big salaries, a dangerous job with awful hours that requires both physical and mental skills. But holding a fucking sign and turning it every few minutes? The American job market is just fucked up.Tsyroc wrote:
More on topic. Back in the 80's I lived in the Quad Cities (Iowa/Illinois) right when a bunch of the labor unions screwed themselves out of jobs. One guy I knew was making $36 an hour with nothing but a high school education. I'm not sure what his job was but I know that his company, Caterpillar closed the plant and moved to France. You know something is wrong with your manufacturing/business practices if moving the plant to France is an improvement.
Sea Skimmer wrote:The American job market is just fucked up.
This is economic warfare on a vast scale never before seen.Knudson's company, Modern Fence Technologies, developed a unique and proprietary, fully adjustable gate hardware for vinyl fences. The product was well received, but before long, a Chinese company had copied its design and is selling the hardware at half of MFT's price.
"That's lower than my raw materials costs," Knudson said Thursday during a round table on the state of manufacturing.
And it's not just limited to one company. As a routine fact...MKSheppard wrote: This is economic warfare on a vast scale never before seen.
Chinese manufacturers are quoting projects at less than the cost of raw materials for U.S. manufacturers, said Paul Ericksen of the Wisconsin Supplier Development Consortium, a manufacturing group that fosters relationships between the state's suppliers and original equipment manufacturers.
Looks like they're not so in favor of "free" trade now that their ox is being gored.In Mexico, there is growing concern over job losses in manufacturing, blamed in part on plants moving to China and other cheap labor markets. Spokesmen for the so-called Maquiladora sector are crying out for help.
Please tell me this is in the process of being repealed. How is it legal for a union to "freeze out" those unaffiliated from a specific job market? Hell, our Merchant Marine is active in national defense during certain emergency periods.And then of course we have the US merchant marine. Its union got a law passed requiring any American flagged ship sailing from an America port to another American port to have an all union crew paid union wages. The result was the number of ships flying the US flag dropped from the high thousands to its current level of less then three hundred. Meanwhile about twelve million tons of shipping now fly's the Liberian flag and a similar number that Panama. Heck you don't even have to travel to either country to register as they both opened offices for the task in New York City.
Here a lot of those flag guys are on work release from prison! I dont think they make much money though.Sea Skimmer wrote:
In my state the road workers who holds the STOP/GO signs makes 30 dollars and hour and the flagmen get something like 45 all because its hazardous duty. The job requirements are a high school diploma and a six or so week training course. You know I can understand people like telephone linemen making big salaries, a dangerous job with awful hours that requires both physical and mental skills. But holding a fucking sign and turning it every few minutes? The American job market is just fucked up.
I smell bullshit. I think the author of this article is seriously exaggerating, by making it seem as if exotic technology is being exported. Did you know that sintered-metal neodymium iron-boron magnets can be purchased at science stores in Toronto, and that it is commonly used in home theatre loudspeakers? Or that sintered-metal fabrication is older than any of us, and is hardly exotic since you can buy sintered-metal products in something as simple as the DME toolmaking catalogue?MKSheppard wrote:Indianapolis-based Magnequench Inc. has not yet publically announced the closing of its Valparaiso, Ind., factory, but Insight has confirmed that the company will shut down this year and relocate at least some of its high-tech machine tools to Tianjin, China. Word of the shutdown comes as the company is producing critical parts for the U.S. Joint Direct Attack Munition [JDAM] project, more widely known as smart bombs, raising heavy security issues related to the transfer of military technology to the PRC. The factory uses rare earths to produce sintered neodymium-iron-boron permanent magnets that have many industrial applications but are essential to the servos critical to precision-guided munitions. According to documents obtained by Insight, Magnequench UG currently is producing thousands of the rare-earth magnets for "SL Montevideo Tech," a Minnesota-based manufacturer of servos. That company confirmed to Insight that it holds a Department of Defense [DoD] contract to produce the high-tech motors for the precision-guided JDAM.
The price difference isn't as large as you'd think.I can respect Glocksman even though we disagree because he says upfront that he will pay more for domestically made goods. He puts his money where his mouth is. When the time comes to pony up the cash at the checkout counter, do you?