by jaws » Tue 11 Oct 2005, 22:29:04
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('pup55', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')n 1999, the average Korean wage was US$1,241 per month, 35% of the average Japan wage, 49% of the average US wage, and comparable to Taiwan’s average, at $1,169. The average wage increased by 8% to US$1,338 in 2000,
Pacific BridgeAnyway there is some evidence that the Korean wage has risen to the point that some of that work has been outsourced to filipinos.
This whole issue is a really serious problem, and not just for the UAW.
What makes it even more serious is that at some point in the day, nearly everyone is vulnerable to having an even more qualified worker in a lower wage country take their job, thus putting them out into the street. Alternately, some undocumented or partially documented worker from a third world country can be imported to work in your place.
At some point this will blow up in the faces of the policy makers that have allowed this to happen. Reason: Eli's point above. If there is no middle class, there are no consumers of value-added goods.
Do you not realize what is really happening, when it is right there in front of you in the numbers? Korean jobs are being exported because Korean wages
Koreans are getting wealthier. They don't want to work in factory jobs anymore. What do you think would happen if the factory owners decided not to raise wages at the same rate as the local market? Every one of their employees would leave for better-paying jobs, and the factory would have to shut down. This is what causes offshoring to other countries, labor becomes too expensive to justify production at that location. And it's not true that it's a race to the bottom, because if it were then wages would not be going up at all and the factory wouldn't have to move.
Offshoring is not a bad event, it is the unavoidable consequence of a good event, market wages going up.