Donate Bitcoin

Donate Paypal


PeakOil is You

PeakOil is You

Loud Sucking Sound

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Loud Sucking Sound

Unread postby grabby » Thu 26 Jan 2006, 23:07:02

Who remember's Ross Perot?

The weird little guy who promised
America would loose jobs if Global economy and NAFTA passed?
And the Unions would be killed off?

Well, He was right. There is a large sucking sound, of jobs heading overseas.
This shows up as the water is almost empty down the drain, and the unions are struggling.
Where is Ross now?

Probably moved to Europe.

Now we are SUPER GLOBAL and SUPER oil dependant, isn't that nice?

Well when the oil gets expensive we will be sorry.
User avatar
grabby
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1291
Joined: Tue 08 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 04:48:18

Hello angry person.

Just a few points to clarify. How did globalization make the US more energy dependent than it already is? I thought energy dependence had something to do with using 20-25% of the world's oil to support your economy, while having only 3% of its reserves, and not whether the countries labor force was unionized or not? Does unionization make a country less energy dependent? Oh, less economic activity, less energy consumed. Got it.

What do you have against Canadians? Do you object to a few autoworker's jobs going north? Seems like a fair trade-off considering they have to buy your media products, and they send you that oil & gas you seem quite addicted to? Or maybe it is the Mexicans you don't like? Yes, since NAFTA passed they are all living in McMansions and driving luxury SUVs, while Americans die everyday trying to cross the Arizona desert to find jobs in the border towns along the Mexican border.

Oops, did I see yesterday that unemployment went up in the USA? Yes, I think it did? From the lowest level since 2000. You remember the dotcom boom? When companies were paying introduction bonuses to find workers. Gee, it is sure tough being American. An average family income of +$45.000 and you get to buy stuff at Wal-Mart made by Chinese who earn $1000-1500 per year. And they get to live in an over-crowded, polluted country with no rights or freedoms. They cannot even surf the internet to post rants about their government because Google and Yahoo won't let them.

In any case, just curious about your world view. Fortress America. All the high paying jobs. A monopoly on the world's oil & natural resources. Union wages & benefits for everyone regardless of merit or education. To heck with the developing world and your neighbors. And if those pesky Canadians won't sell you oil & gas and their fresh water, the military might to go up there and take it away from them. And those Mexicans can stay home and work in luxury hotels for poverty wages, so long as Americans are safe & free to go down there for their holidays, but keep those beggars and children away, please.

Yep, I can see you give these issues a lot of deep thought. Ross would be proud of you my friend. Have a nice weekend.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby spacebuoy » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 09:29:27

You're right, who remembers Ross Perot's comment now? It's ironic because at the time he was talking about NAFTA, which as a Canadian, I think has benefited the US, esp. when it comes to exploiting our resources, but in reality what has hurt or will hurt americans is the loss of jobs to India and China, which was only dimly perceived at the time. Despite the low unemployment, manufacturing is like a shell in the US, all products are made in Asia... look at the value of GM versus Honda and Toyota. It's true, Ross Perot sounded the alarm and was basically laughed at. The globalization of the financial industry means everyone in North America can get profoundly into debt thanks to lenders in Asia where everyone saves money, another huge irony. I think even if there wasn't peak oil, globalization alone would economically ruin the US, esp. with China desperately trying to catch up and having all the energy and vigor that it has.
Incidentally despite low unemployment, the majority of jobs that are available in the US are low-paying and or ununionized service jobs, not high quality, high wage jobs, which is why he's right about unionization suffering. Average wages have increased to a miniscule extent in the last few years, because good jobs have been lost and poor paying ones created.
All this stuff comes from 'empire of debt' by the way, Bill Bonner and Addison Wiggin.
User avatar
spacebuoy
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 2
Joined: Fri 12 Aug 2005, 03:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby BO » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 09:42:36

Mr. Bill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')es, since NAFTA passed they are all living in McMansions and driving luxury SUVs


Please provide some documentation for this. I live in Florida, and have had many clients who employ mexicans to do what amounts to slave labor for $7.00 an hour. I have NEVER seen or heard of a Mexican immigrant living in a McMansion, driving a luxury SUV. In fact, the Mexicans working for my current employer have hoards of family and friends just waiting to come over the border if work is available here in US. Did you get your information on NAFTA from some sort of government brochure?
User avatar
BO
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 111
Joined: Fri 02 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Philadelphia, PA

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby MrBill » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 09:56:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('BO', 'M')r. Bill wrote:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'Y')es, since NAFTA passed they are all living in McMansions and driving luxury SUVs


Please provide some documentation for this. I live in Florida, and have had many clients who employ mexicans to do what amounts to slave labor for $7.00 an hour. I have NEVER seen or heard of a Mexican immigrant living in a McMansion, driving a luxury SUV. In fact, the Mexicans working for my current employer have hoards of family and friends just waiting to come over the border if work is available here in US. Did you get your information on NAFTA from some sort of government brochure?


Where shall I start with your question? Or as Steve Martin might say, "gee, irony is so ironical sometimes."

RE relative savings rates. Um, there is nothing stopping Americans from saving as much as Chinese. They should be able to save more in absolute and relative terms because their incomes are that much higher. Consumption is a choice not obligation.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby BO » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 11:22:17

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')armers in Mexico have opposed and still oppose NAFTA because the heavy agriculture subsidies for farmers in the United States have put a great deal of downward pressure on Mexican agricultural prices, forcing many farmers out of business. Opposition to NAFTA also comes from environmental, social justice, and other advocacy organizations that believe NAFTA has detrimental non-economic impacts to public health, the environment, etc. In Mexico, as only a single example, poverty has risen considerably since the signing of NAFTA. Wages there have decreased by as much as 20 percent in some sectors. NAFTA's approval was quickly followed by an uprising amongst Zapatista revolutionaries, and tension between them and the Mexican government remains a major issue. Furthermore, NAFTA was accompanied by dramatic reduction of the influence of trade unions in Mexico's urban areas. NAFTA has been accompanied by a dramatic increase of illegal immigration from Mexico to the United States; presumably, a significant fraction of these people are farmers forced off their land by bankruptcy.


Is life better for the majority of Mexicans? or only for the minority elites, that ALWAYS prosper from so called "free" trade?

Theories about free trade agreements don't add up, yes GDP goes up, at the same time so does poverty, to extraordinary rates, like 70-90 percent.
Because all the farmers that go out of business are forced into city slums, or across the border just to find work. WTO, NAFTA, CAFTA, etc. supporters can't seem to explain why since the introduction of such policies, there is now more poverty, wealth inequality, and civil unrest than ever. Do the math.
User avatar
BO
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 111
Joined: Fri 02 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Philadelphia, PA

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby grabby » Fri 27 Jan 2006, 11:49:30

If a lake with water level at 1500 feet is connected to 35 small lakes with water levels at 1000 feet, eventually the 1500 foot lake is left high and dry with useless docks and boats.

and the smaller lakes are opoverflowing with cash(water) and they buy more cars and burn more gas and make more money,

Oil will be in short supply for the country at 1500 feet and no one can buy any.

Closing the borders and producing at home is the only way to economic independance
(CCanada and USA should unite Canada could be our 51 52 and 53rd state. They ahve the wood and the oil.)

Mexico needs visas and a big wall at the border.

and yes our goods will triple in price, but we will have jobs.
other wise it is downhill to the mud flats.

Vote for Grabby for opprez.
Libertarian I guess - Canadian libertarian.
User avatar
grabby
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1291
Joined: Tue 08 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby FossilFool » Mon 30 Jan 2006, 11:57:23

I actually demonstrated against the WTO on my campus when I was in college for environmental reasons. Now, I think it could have been part of the demand destruction to intentionally make the economy weak. Or it could be just needing to increase complexity to grow more.
User avatar
FossilFool
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 78
Joined: Sun 29 Jan 2006, 04:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby jdmartin » Mon 30 Jan 2006, 13:53:56

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'H')ello angry person.

Just a few points to clarify. How did globalization make the US more energy dependent than it already is? I thought energy dependence had something to do with using 20-25% of the world's oil to support your economy, while having only 3% of its reserves, and not whether the countries labor force was unionized or not? Does unionization make a country less energy dependent? Oh, less economic activity, less energy consumed. Got it.

What do you have against Canadians? Do you object to a few autoworker's jobs going north? Seems like a fair trade-off considering they have to buy your media products, and they send you that oil & gas you seem quite addicted to? Or maybe it is the Mexicans you don't like? Yes, since NAFTA passed they are all living in McMansions and driving luxury SUVs, while Americans die everyday trying to cross the Arizona desert to find jobs in the border towns along the Mexican border.

Oops, did I see yesterday that unemployment went up in the USA? Yes, I think it did? From the lowest level since 2000. You remember the dotcom boom? When companies were paying introduction bonuses to find workers. Gee, it is sure tough being American. An average family income of +$45.000 and you get to buy stuff at Wal-Mart made by Chinese who earn $1000-1500 per year. And they get to live in an over-crowded, polluted country with no rights or freedoms. They cannot even surf the internet to post rants about their government because Google and Yahoo won't let them.

In any case, just curious about your world view. Fortress America. All the high paying jobs. A monopoly on the world's oil & natural resources. Union wages & benefits for everyone regardless of merit or education. To heck with the developing world and your neighbors. And if those pesky Canadians won't sell you oil & gas and their fresh water, the military might to go up there and take it away from them. And those Mexicans can stay home and work in luxury hotels for poverty wages, so long as Americans are safe & free to go down there for their holidays, but keep those beggars and children away, please.

Yep, I can see you give these issues a lot of deep thought. Ross would be proud of you my friend. Have a nice weekend.


Grabby's post makes a lot of good points. Putting it bluntly, globalization is going to be the ruin of the United States. And Europe. With globalization, we are pandering to the least common denominator. That means take 10$ hour US jobs and send them to Mexico for $3 hour. Then send those $3 hour Mexican jobs to China for 1$ hour. What does this do? It allows small groups of individuals to horde obscene amounts of money. The more you concentrate funds into fewer hands, the fewer dollars are exchanged in the economy. Eventually pop goes the weasel.

Your facetious remark about Mexicans driving SUV's proves the very point you are attempting to disprove. Globalization agreements have consistently been sold to the public with the mantra that it's going to improve the standard of living for both sides. Mexicans will be buying American goods, keeping US jobs afloat. Americans will be enjoying lower prices from Mexican produced items. Sounds good in theory but doesn't work in reality. Mexicans can't afford American made goods. The lower-priced Mexican goods Americans buy are transplants from the US. Only thing is, those $10 factory workers won't be buying any since they're now unemployed or working at Wallyworld for $6. Do this enough times and we're all scraping bottom.

Free trade cannot be free unless you have level playing fields. How can you have a level playing field with a country that has existed in poverty for thousands of years?

A modified "fortress America" IS a good idea. Free trade with Canada, Europe, Japan and Australia is reasonable. All other countries should have conditions attached to becoming recipients of our goods. These conditions used to be on China, until the Corps got ahold of enough politician ears that they could eliminate human rights requirements, et. al, and grant these countries "Most favored nation" status.

You are right, however, that globalization doesn't make us more or less energy dependent. In some senses, globalization has reduced our personal energy needs (relocation of fertilizer plants out of the country because of natural gas, for example).
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
User avatar
jdmartin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1272
Joined: Thu 19 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Merry Ol' USA
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby diogenes » Mon 30 Jan 2006, 17:19:29

MrBill, where in the United States do you live? Do you live in the "rust belt," where steel and heavy industry have fled? Do you live in the old South, where cotton mills and furniture have collapsed? Do you live in Michigan, where the automobile industry has become a staggering shell of its former self?

Do you actually believe official unemployment statistics? Recently, on LATOC, a story was linked which said that twenty-five thousand people applied for three hundred jobs at a Chicago-area Wal-Mart. Think about that: thousands of people competing for menial jobs which don't pay a living wage even in the sticks---let alone Chicago. Official unemployment statistics count only those who are eligible for federal unemployment benefits, which are limited in duration. What about people who have run out of unemployment benefits, or who never bothered filing?

You can't look at New York, New Jersey, and California and say: "This is how Americans live."
diogenes
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 30
Joined: Sun 29 Jan 2006, 04:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby If_oil_grew_like_bamboo » Mon 30 Jan 2006, 22:54:24

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', '
')Mexicans will be buying American goods, keeping US jobs afloat. Americans will be enjoying lower prices from Mexican produced items. Sounds good in theory but doesn't work in reality. Mexicans can't afford American made goods. The lower-priced Mexican goods Americans buy are transplants from the US. Only thing is, those $10 factory workers won't be buying any since they're now unemployed or working at Wallyworld for $6. Do this enough times and we're all scraping bottom.


One of the points of NAFTA was to give Mexicans more money by encouraging American companies to employ them. This puts dollars into Mexico from which Mexico will presumably use to buy goods/engage in some beneficial form of economic interaction from the United States. The reduction of trade barriers with Mexico by the United States can increase its trade ties with Mexico if more money is put into the Mexican economy. You are right that it does have some drawbacks though. Some American workers become unemployed however it is thought that if the American economy begins to focus on higher paying jobs eventually the un-employment rate will eventually decline (once the U.S. focuses more on its comparative advantage). Mexico does have some comparative advantages, which, if it utilized, would enable Americans to focus on other tasks (that is part of the logic of free trade).

The dollars that go into Mexico will be spent on American goods or services. It could be that the population spends it, the buisness do, or the goverment does. The currency may be traded with a third party (Ireland or China for example). Eventually it is likely to return the United States. Much more is involved in currency interactions than just this though.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')ree trade cannot be free unless you have level playing fields. How can you have a level playing field with a country that has existed in poverty for thousands of years?


It is true that free trade is more helpful if countries have a certain level of openess in their economies and are more developed. Developmental differences do affect free trade however they do not entirely mitigate the benefits in many circumstances. Apparently the American government thought that free trade would help stabilize the Mexican economy and eventually yield greater per capita wealth there. Free trade does often cause companies to flock to places with cheap labor however this often leads to economic development in these places which brings about a rise in wages (by which point indigenous and foreign enterprises with higher paying jobs begin to come in to a greater extent).

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', '.')..eliminate human rights requirements, et. al, and grant these countries "Most favored nation" status.


I agree that human rights requirements are fine.



I think that it is proven to a substantial extent that free trade helps the economies of the participants. Jobs issues (what to do about dislocation) and environmental issues are other factors though.
User avatar
If_oil_grew_like_bamboo
Wood
Wood
 
Posts: 9
Joined: Sat 28 Jan 2006, 04:00:00
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby Odin » Tue 31 Jan 2006, 00:07:56

The problem with free trade is that it encourages races to the bottom in order to compete, untimately benefiting the corporate elite and screwing over everyone else. It is one of capitalism's biggest flaws. Replacing investors with employees as the owners of businesses would make free trade a good thing since it would encourage compitition for workers, thereby increasing wages.

Love the thread title, BTW. :-D
User avatar
Odin
Peat
Peat
 
Posts: 89
Joined: Sat 28 Jan 2006, 04:00:00
Location: Moorhead, MN, USA

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby TommyJefferson » Tue 31 Jan 2006, 09:56:05

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Odin', 'T')he problem with free trade is that it encourages races to the bottom in order to compete


Well said Odin.

That problem is very intractable. I wish I knew the solution for it.
Conform . Consume . Obey .
User avatar
TommyJefferson
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1757
Joined: Thu 19 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Texas and Los Angeles
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby jdmartin » Tue 31 Jan 2006, 14:16:16

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Odin', 'T')he problem with free trade is that it encourages races to the bottom in order to compete, untimately benefiting the corporate elite and screwing over everyone else. It is one of capitalism's biggest flaws. Replacing investors with employees as the owners of businesses would make free trade a good thing since it would encourage compitition for workers, thereby increasing wages.

Love the thread title, BTW. :-D


I have said exactly this on this board many, many times.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')hat problem is very intractable. I wish I knew the solution for it.


I really don't think there is much of a solution if unbridled capitalism is what we're after. Some forms of modified socialism appear to provide the best overall standard of living (i.e. Scandinavia) for the most people. There's unlikely any perfect solution, human nature being what it is.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')ree trade does often cause companies to flock to places with cheap labor however this often leads to economic development in these places which brings about a rise in wages (by which point indigenous and foreign enterprises with higher paying jobs begin to come in to a greater extent).


Why, then, are more Mexicans than ever attempting to come into the US? I have a small contingency of Mexican friends that work and live locally. They are all here because conditions are abhorrent in Mexico where they're from. They send money back home for their relatives to survive.

This argument is one of those used whenever people are pushing free trade. It's a farce. IF there were no other "cheapo" places to go, then it's very possible that a higher standard of living could evolve in these places. Unfortunately, there's always another China or Vietnam for Multinational X to run off to. What we're seeing is competition between countries for jobs, not at all unlike what's going on in the US between states. How do states cope with this limited pool of companies? By offering huge incentives however possible. Those incentives include: tax breaks, subsidies, utility breaks, favorable laws, and other things. Southern states enticed Northern companies by offering cheapo labor and anti-union laws. This is exactly what China vs the US is doing. China is our South.

And one other thing: what kind of "Trade" is it when you buy 10 items from one guy and sell him back 1 item of like value? It's pretty obvious that, eventually, unless you've got some inexhaustible supply of money, you're going to be broke since the other guy's not buying any of your crap. If you ran a car repair shop, how long do you think you could keep buying up parts without having people buying your repair services?

Free trade is a crock of crap. It is a scam hoisted upon us by Corporations with the politicians in their pockets, designed to make a few people fabulously rich and turn everyone else into paupers. We can possibly have "free trade" with Europe, Japan, Canada because those societies are wealthy just like us. How did they get wealthy? We subsidized them until they were wealthy (Canada somewhat excepted). Japan was a mooncrater. Our workers constructed things that they bought, with our loans, until they got to be a wealthy, strong society and could afford to buy things from us on an equal basis. If we were doing the same thing with China, this would be a whole different story.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
User avatar
jdmartin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1272
Joined: Thu 19 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Merry Ol' USA
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby DesertBear2 » Wed 01 Feb 2006, 05:18:32

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('jdmartin', ' ')Americans will be enjoying lower prices from Mexican produced items. Sounds good in theory but doesn't work in reality. Mexicans can't afford American made goods. The lower-priced Mexican goods Americans buy are transplants from the US.


Just a comment- a few years back, we were seeing quite a few products with Made in Mexico on the labeling. In recent years, I haven't seen the Mexico labeling very often outside of food items. Maybe those Mexican assembly plants themselves migrated to Asia??
DesertBear2
Tar Sands
Tar Sands
 
Posts: 514
Joined: Sat 13 Aug 2005, 03:00:00
Location: BlueRidgeVA
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby grabby » Wed 01 Feb 2006, 11:31:26

MEXICO AND CANADA WERE INCLUDED in NAFTA for onley one reason

they are our #1 and #2 importers for oil and food, we NEED to totally dominate them.if they did not have oil they would have never been allowed to sign onto NAFTA.

What about America? WHAT DO WE PRODUCE?

In washington state our #1 EMPLOYER is the UNIVERSITY of Wahsington.
How sad is that?

Boeing is second.

Paper money, ARTS and politicians, all users of natural resources that produce minimalist worthwhile material, and profits made goes overseas into investments in europe to build factories and new technology.

Our colleges produce some science but less than India china and europe., they get hired (the best) by american companies who invent new tech and manufacture it overseas.

The big guys raped us, but we trust them anyway.
(Sounds like a battered wife)
But they bring a few parts over here and put them together by robot to say MADE IN USA, to pacify.

we had the best technology schooling and brains, but it all went to china and india sold out. What we have now is a pile of schools filled with equal opportunity student consumers in a diploma mill who ereally can't compare to the old engineering days.

You want a good education? go to India. Here it is nothing but a business, take their 75 grand and give them a diploma with a report card that show A's and they can't pass a high school exam written in 1880.

All companies still manufacturering anything worthwhile generally have the chief engineer some 55 y/o leftover from WWII era, those old guys can fix anything and keep things running.

Lets see America produce a Saturn 5 rocket using only sliderules. Can't be done again, common sense and guestimation is more lacking now.

Have to use intelligent computer systems and they will blindly build it and develope a huge plane too heavy to fly (No one double checked the computer program in europe, everyone blindly went ahead, it was too heavy to fly. they had to revamp it, someone programmed the computer incorrectly.

oh yes, corn and wheat somewhat we still produce some food because we have water. but Mexico and even Canada does this also,

Our economy was drivn by the hope of cheaper goods from elsewhere and now that is coming to a close.
We are strangling our doctors, and rewarding the lawyers for redistributing wealth.

I'd say America is post rape and still breathing but bruised.

Wonder if we can take the oil crisis?
User avatar
grabby
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1291
Joined: Tue 08 Nov 2005, 04:00:00

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby TommyJefferson » Wed 01 Feb 2006, 11:55:55

Good one Grabby!
Conform . Consume . Obey .
User avatar
TommyJefferson
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1757
Joined: Thu 19 Aug 2004, 03:00:00
Location: Texas and Los Angeles

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 02 Feb 2006, 05:48:24

So basically what you are saying Grabby is that LOUD SUCKING SOUND is not caused by NAFTA or in fact free trade with the Asian Tigers or anyone else, but caused by a failure to manufacture anything of value at home that anyone might want to pay for and a failure to educate enough engineers to remedy this basic economic flaw?

In this case America would be screwed with or without free trade, just like a lack of hard currency for imports and shoddy domestic manufacturing meant that Russians had to get by with goods of poorer and poorer quality even while the shelves went bare due to a lack of the basics. Funnily enough they had enough engineers, but just no functioning market economy?

Well, I guess when the wheel stops and living standards plunge far enough, Americans may rediscover hardwork and ingenuity plus a good education as the real wealth creators. Meanwhile, Congressmen's only solution seems to be punitive wealth taxes on oil companies rather than either reducing hydrocarbon consumption or actively looking for alternatives. Well, good luck with that.

Union jobs with union wages and benefits are not very sustainable unless you can actually produce something someone is willing to buy at a profit. If it were otherwise there are lots of workers and lots of wide open spaces in the rustbelts and midwest to build world beating factories. Just get a bunch of unionized workers to form employee owned companies, screw the big bosses and wall street bankers, and just get started. Give everyone a slide ruler and start churning out better products for less money than anyone else. Dell seems to be able to do it?
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby jdmartin » Thu 02 Feb 2006, 09:54:28

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('MrBill', 'S')o basically what you are saying Grabby is that LOUD SUCKING SOUND is not caused by NAFTA or in fact free trade with the Asian Tigers or anyone else, but caused by a failure to manufacture anything of value at home that anyone might want to pay for and a failure to educate enough engineers to remedy this basic economic flaw?

In this case America would be screwed with or without free trade, just like a lack of hard currency for imports and shoddy domestic manufacturing meant that Russians had to get by with goods of poorer and poorer quality even while the shelves went bare due to a lack of the basics. Funnily enough they had enough engineers, but just no functioning market economy?

Well, I guess when the wheel stops and living standards plunge far enough, Americans may rediscover hardwork and ingenuity plus a good education as the real wealth creators. Meanwhile, Congressmen's only solution seems to be punitive wealth taxes on oil companies rather than either reducing hydrocarbon consumption or actively looking for alternatives. Well, good luck with that.

Union jobs with union wages and benefits are not very sustainable unless you can actually produce something someone is willing to buy at a profit. If it were otherwise there are lots of workers and lots of wide open spaces in the rustbelts and midwest to build world beating factories. Just get a bunch of unionized workers to form employee owned companies, screw the big bosses and wall street bankers, and just get started. Give everyone a slide ruler and start churning out better products for less money than anyone else. Dell seems to be able to do it?


If I may be so bold as to help out, I don't think that's what's being said at all. Rather, the creation of "free trade" (BS as I've already pointed out) has set off a chain of events that has left much of the United States grabbing at straws to find something, anything, that can pay halfway decent. That is the point of the post.

As for "hard work and ingenuity", they have so far been unable to compete with people working for 50 cents an hour. There are plenty of hardworking people in the US today barely scraping by.

Produce something someone is willing to buy at a profit? Who out there is able to buy anything we produce? The Chinese are us; the Chinese workers don't make enough money to buy anything made here. Europe is not buying American made goods for the same reason (buying Chinese). While Europe has better trade protection than the US, it won't be long before they're in the same boat as us, since this "race to the bottom" is taking place worldwide.

Dell seems to be able to do it? Dell is, for all intents and purposes, an Asian company. All their stuff is made in Asia. Their helpline people are in India. A poor choice to use as an example.

Employee owned companies, screw Wall Street and get started? You obviously exist in some parallel universe that has little understanding of finance, business sense, or US law.

Finally, I have to laugh at the overall cheekiness of your post considering you live in a country that produces virtually nothing of value. If it wasn't for tourism and finance - also known as sight-seeing and money laundering - Cypriots would still be living in mud huts, trying to decide if they would rather be Greek peasants or Turkish peasants. As it is, Turkey props up that end with cash; otherwise, they would be living in mud huts.
After fueling up their cars, Twyman says they bowed their heads and asked God for cheaper gas.There was no immediate answer, but he says other motorists joined in and the service station owner didn't run them off.
User avatar
jdmartin
Heavy Crude
Heavy Crude
 
Posts: 1272
Joined: Thu 19 May 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Merry Ol' USA
Top

Re: LOUD SUCKING SOUND

Unread postby MrBill » Thu 02 Feb 2006, 11:29:43

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'P')roduce something someone is willing to buy at a profit? Who out there is able to buy anything we produce? The Chinese are us; the Chinese workers don't make enough money to buy anything made here. Europe is not buying American made goods for the same reason (buying Chinese). While Europe has better trade protection than the US, it won't be long before they're in the same boat as us, since this "race to the bottom" is taking place worldwide.


Yes, that is the piont. Better find someone or something.

RE Cyprus. Well, I have to live somewhere. May as well be warm. And yes, the entire economy is supported by real-estate development, house building and selling real-estate to holiday makers and the retired who have sold their overpriced properties in London. I expect the local economy and the Cyprus pound to take a nasty knock when that particular bubble bursts.

Cheeky or not your Made in America problems better find some Made in America solutions instead of ranting about others who might like to improve their historical lot in life. That may even include either a) improving labor productivity, or b) American labor pricing itself more competitive relative to others, or c) withdrawing from NAFTA, the WTO and all other free trade agreements and zones and erecting protectionist barriers. What you cannot have is everything your way.
The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.
User avatar
MrBill
Expert
Expert
 
Posts: 5630
Joined: Thu 15 Sep 2005, 03:00:00
Location: Eurasia
Top

Next

Return to Economics & Finance

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest

cron