Is The US Re-Industrializing By Weakening the Dollar ?

Quote from makloda:

UK did it in 1992/1993.

This must be a joke. UK used to be an economic superpower and post devaluation it is just a debt ridden nation with a falling standard of living. It's actually been on a worse track than USA.
The only power left in UK is the City of London, which is technically not U.K territory.
 
Quote from ASusilovic:



Good laugh over here. I just look around my office and see Hewlett Packard printers, Dell PC´s, Apple I Phone, Apple MacBook Pro´s, Texas Instrument electronic calculators...


Apple outsources their circuit designs. So does HP. TI's chips aren't fabricated in the US. Take a look at the crap inside of those.
 
Quote from Anaconda:

Actually, the only significant manufacturing that happens in the US is from the military industrial complex. Not exactly productive when you look at the debt behind USA's defense spending.

"Made in USA' is very very rare to see on products that are in everyday use, personal or business. But how would you know, you do not even live in this country.

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"Made in USA' is very very rare to see on products that are in everyday use, personal or business. But how would you know, you do not even live in this country. [/B][/QUOTE]


Very true.....Walk into any retail box....

Where is it made ? In US 999/1000 items....no....

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Keen mentions $7 Trilion leaving $14 Trillion US in terms of demand....

And there seems to be the idea that China makes the trinkets....and the US makes the real stuff....

And the majority of retail = trinkets....

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Underlying key.....the "securitization....no skin in the game....debt model"....

Debt is the key....

The US has to put debt in check....

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Also money where it matters most....

ie Entrepreneurship is the estuary of US Commerce....

This sector has to be nurtured....
 
http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/05_12/b3925601.htm

To answer the question in the article. Yes we already have gone too far. We shipped all our designs over to foreign countries to save a buck. People would justify it, "well if I don't do it they'll just replace me with someone who will." Now look what happens.

Where I went to school, student enrollment in engineering is way down. Science and engineering just isn't glorified enough to want to go into it. Now days it's business, marketing, communications, and managing other people. No value-added components for the long term.

You certainly don't hear this anymore:
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"Let's bring back manufacturing jobs".... "Let's reindustiralize the USA"... TOTAL CROCK OF SHIT POLITICO SPEW.... It's not possible to "reindustrialize the USA by weakening the $USD".... the wage differential between US and low labor cost countries is too great.... unless, of course, you don't mind BANKRUPTING NEARLY ALL US CITIZENS...
 
China only accounts for ~11% of global manufacturing output. Also, the US industrial base is as alive and kicking as it was 15 years ago:

51853.png
 
Quote from makloda:

China only accounts for ~11% of global manufacturing output. Also, the US industrial base is as alive and kicking as it was 15 years ago:

51853.png

nice Kool-Aid
 
Quote from Misthos:

nice Kool-Aid

CORRECTAMUNDO! What's never mentioned is the "labor cost component" of manufactured goods. In the US, it's high... $20/hr or more? In China it's what, $1/hour?

Industrial output is generally measured by "final cost of produced goods"... but if it were measured in "units of output", China might have already surpassed us.

A BIG factor in "American output" is in military weapons. I'm sure they include a "higher than average" labor cost component. Of course, we're not outsourcing our cruise missles and smart bombs to foreign countries.

Any truly truthful and critical assessment of our manufacturing status would likely reveal that we are much behind the "official" stats as spewed by government...
 
Quote from Scataphagos:

Industrial output is generally measured by "final cost of produced goods"... but if it were measured in "units of output", China might have already surpassed us.
You mean a Swiss watch for $8,000 should be given the same weight as a $4 Chinese watch? Oh my...
 
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