Quote from faure:
I just don't get it. China exports cheap products and to a large extent the US is the recepient of these goods. Yet China doesn't have a free floating currency and it essentially manipulates it to ensure a weaker yuan and more money from exports.
Meanwhile the US soaks up the "artificially cheap" products to the detriment of it's local producers and local jobs. If the US were to say no thank you to Chinese imports, at some degree, I see it hurting the Chinese a lot and might end up being benifical to the US economy and eventually the deficit.
My question is, given all of this, why doesn't the US have China under it's thumb?
and thats true for all low-value-added type products... now if i look at my personal consumption all in, i'd say the share of those type of products / services is rather low, in $ terms less than 10-20%... as for other more elaborate products & services i am using, the made-in-china $ component is probably no more than 10-20% again on average, of the total end user price... these products & services are usually designed / bundled etc from outside of china, in higher income parts of the world... even if the 90+% of resulting profits are routinely parked in offshore entities so as to 'optimize' taxation... but not to worry, this money is then again utilized in a similar manner as above, although not much of it prob ever returns to high-tax / GST / VAT etc jurisdictions... and why shld it? loads of fun to be had in plenty low tax jurisdictions around the globe... watcha guys think?Quote from rufus_4000:
I was in Vegas a while ago, and want to pick up a snow globe in the airport, it was made in China, but why should I care if it is made in China, Malaysia, Japan, Iowa, or Wisconsin? I only care if it is decently made, heck, it is $9 (you can't go wrong with $9).