Oh, you mean industrial capacity for war. Well you know more is always better for that.
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Republican aggresors grow skeptical of free trade
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It's amazing that something can be so fundamentally immoral that even Republicans can recognize what it is.
There's NO WAY that China should be allowed to get away with their industrial (mal)practices, they need incitement to put more emphasis on quality of every kind - quality of the products and quality of life.
You just can't morally trade freely with an entity like China because you're being complicit in their immorality.
And this is morality in a humanist/compassionate sense, not divine.
The correct thing to do, as abhorrent as the concept is, is to attach a monetary value to the moral-cost of the imported goods and tariff them appropriately. It would of course be nice to spend the proceeds morally rather than on bombs or whatever. I like the idea of spending the proceeds on green technology and stuff then sending it to China as a kind of big and less than subtle hint.
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Poor Berzerker
and if you look at our trade deals, we dont have free trade.
They can produce whatever they want to. That's the benefit of a command economy.
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Originally posted by Kidicious
That's stupid. When is free trade going to make the US deficit go away, the dollar stronger etc... ? We can go through this all day if you want. Or you can just explain yourself.
It's more like "You can have this job, and I'll owe you money"
China does not produce goods more efficiently than we do. They just produce goods more cheaply. There is no overall economic advantage to that.
I would believe in free trade if corporations didn't use cheaper labor in other countries. I'm positive that that's not what classical economics were talking about when they argued for free trade. That, in fact, creates inefficiencies. Things are produced for the cheap labor not where they can be brought to market with the least amount of labor.
Um no it's not. We are using most of that capacity. Stopping trade with China would require increasing capacity quite a bit."The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists."
-Joan Robinson
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Originally posted by Barnabas
The USA gets goods, the rest of the world gets green paper
How is the USA suffering? I think they are doing great
Luckily the US economy and world demand for dollars is so high that any changes will be relatively slow and orderly instead of the big collapses we see in developing economies but a slow motion spiral downward leaves you in the same spot as the sudden spike downward even if it takes a bit longer.Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.
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Originally posted by Oerdin
Send enough green paper over seas and the value of that green paper goes down. This can be problematic to people who have most of their assets valued in green paper. Like say EVERYONE who owns something in the US.
Luckily the US economy and world demand for dollars is so high that any changes will be relatively slow and orderly instead of the big collapses we see in developing economies but a slow motion spiral downward leaves you in the same spot as the sudden spike downward even if it takes a bit longer."The purpose of studying economics is not to acquire a set of ready-made answers to economic questions, but to learn how to avoid being deceived by economists."
-Joan Robinson
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Originally posted by Victor Galis
If economists are to be believed, it will make the deficit go away and the dollar stronger when it is so weak that imports are too expensive for Americans and American exports are cheap to everyone else.
Yeah... except those suckers accept weak American dollars whose fall in value doesn't even make up for the low interest rates paid on it.
Actually... they don't have to produce anything better than us. There just has to be a difference in the relative efficiency of producing goods. Like... if we can produce more high-tech goods per unit of unit of labour-intensive good than they can, there's gains to be had.
Except without free trade that labour wouldn't be employed at all, and we'd waste more labour on things we don't produce that well.
And that would come at the expense of higher tech industries. For all the whining about jobs going abroad, the US's unemployment rate is pretty low by historical standards.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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We all do realize how well managed trade worked for the former Soviet Union. Efficiency .
Oh, and you seem to think for some inexplicable reason there is no other factor than weak dollar, exports, and deficits. There may be... well, other reasons why deficits are occuring. I'd imagine that selling more stuff overseas (and selling less foriegn goods "at home" as a result of relatively more expensive prices for imports) would tend to help lower trade deficits. But that just seems like common sense to me .“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
We all do realize how well managed trade worked for the former Soviet Union. Efficiency .
Oh, and you seem to think for some inexplicable reason there is no other factor than weak dollar, exports, and deficits. There may be... well, other reasons why deficits are occuring. I'd imagine that selling more stuff overseas (and selling less foriegn goods "at home" as a result of relatively more expensive prices for imports) would tend to help lower trade deficits. But that just seems like common sense to me .
And I don't think that the currency has that much to do with the deficit either. In the eighties it looked like the J-curve worked. Notice the shorter lag period. But since then it looks like changes in currency value don't change the deficit.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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You do realize there may be more, greater, policies in effect (like... a massive war in the Middle East) that affect the deficit than more exports because of weak dollar... hmmm?
And selling more stuff overseas isn't going to happen because of our corporations?! So are you saying that cheaper goods don't sell more in other countries?“I give you a new commandment, that you love one another. Just as I have loved you, you also should love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
- John 13:34-35 (NRSV)
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Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
You do realize there may be more, greater, policies in effect (like... a massive war in the Middle East) that affect the deficit than more exports because of weak dollar... hmmm?
I don't think the deficit is caused by weak currency. I just think that weaker currency won't close the deficit. I think the deficit is caused by labor being used in other countries to supply the US market.
And selling more stuff overseas isn't going to happen because of our corporations?! So are you saying that cheaper goods don't sell more in other countries?I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by Imran Siddiqui
We all do realize how well managed trade worked for the former Soviet Union. Efficiency .
Oh, and you seem to think for some inexplicable reason there is no other factor than weak dollar, exports, and deficits. There may be... well, other reasons why deficits are occuring. I'd imagine that selling more stuff overseas (and selling less foriegn goods "at home" as a result of relatively more expensive prices for imports) would tend to help lower trade deficits. But that just seems like common sense to me .Last edited by Whoha; October 5, 2007, 14:38.
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Originally posted by Kataphraktoi
It is gaining us competitive advantage. People need to stop thinking in terms of the industrial age and measuring by factories and workers. It is true there is a worker class here with declining wages\future. They have to be eliminated as a class sometime, just like they eliminated classes before them.
Nor do Chinese factories make good more efficiently than we do. On the contrary, they require far more man-hours to make each unit of production than we do. Their productivity is vastly lower than ours.
The reason production has moved to China is that labor is twenty times cheaper there than here. But this just means that workers are earning less, which means that they can't afford to buy as much stuff. There is no net economic gain to switching to cheaper labor with the same or lower productivity.VANGUARD
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