by Roccland » Sat 14 Jul 2007, 22:20:20
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Not to be rude, but do you understand what globalisation means relative to America's manufacturing of tradeable goods....and services? Have you missed the emasculation of America's manufacturing base subsequent to the mid 90's trade agreements? Are you like Tom Friedman, and believe the world is flat? Please elaborate on how a falling dollar magically makes America a manufacturing giant again, since it hasn't for the past fifteen years. Do you see anything negative relative to the American economy? I'm trying to plumb where you are coming from. You confuse me as to your economic worldview.
I understand his view, it's that if the US Dollar is worth little enough, eventually we'll all be happy to make Nike shoes for the rest of the world, and our $20/hour will actually be worth about 20 cents an hour.....
We inside the Empire will see foreign goods costing more and more in dollars, hell a good pair of Nike or New Balance shoes is over $100 now. But even the cheapies you find in PayLess Shoe Stores will be $100 and the real Nikes etc will be more like $300. At this point, theoretically you'll see entrepreneurs inside the US starting up making shoes, maybe starting out in garages at first and growing larger. Imagine the same thing with fabrics, toasters, etc. I am listening to my little "Grundig" FR200 which I love, right now - it was about $40 but if it's $400, I'm not going to buy one, I'm going to buy an American made rough equivalent even if it's clunkier, or even build something from an American kit (we're in a new golden age for US-produced and designed radio kits right now).
When shipping things all around the world for dirt cheap becomes no longer dirt cheap, we WILL be making our own shoes again...
With the cost of energy poised to shoot to the moon - I am not convinced these US shoe making factories are going to be economically viable.