Originally posted by DarkCloud
Victor
Thanks for pointing that out and for your reasoned response. I know I'm no expert in the field and value others' experience. There definitely are a lot of factors and assumptions to consider in this case.
If I'm correct then, in reading your propositions, Victor- a future scenario could be that the US declines in K, and T, and therefore L becomes more attractive, thus the rich in america suffer, and the economy as a whole suffers, but the middle class will once again grow?
Victor
Thanks for pointing that out and for your reasoned response. I know I'm no expert in the field and value others' experience. There definitely are a lot of factors and assumptions to consider in this case.
If I'm correct then, in reading your propositions, Victor- a future scenario could be that the US declines in K, and T, and therefore L becomes more attractive, thus the rich in america suffer, and the economy as a whole suffers, but the middle class will once again grow?
I do believe the US will stop recieveing as much capital inflow as it currently is just because a declining dollar will make investing in the US a stupid proposition for foreigners. Honestly though, call this more of a hunch than a carefully studied position.
Well, I'd agree about that, but as countries develop a mature domestic market and can invest more in reliable and standard infrastructure, then they will have less reason to invest in America- correct?
Therefore, in a sense (and especially if you add in rising resource costs for transportation), the pressure on the US middle class would not be relieved since the foreign firms wouldn't be investing to build US industries AND they would be withdrawing capital.
I am having a little difficulty conceiving all the variables and possibilities here, so I'll try to draw a little chart- please correct me if I'm wrong.
Is this a correct way to assume your proposition?
If so, then wouldn't this still tend to lead to an international stratification of countries?
In complete free trade, certain countries would specialize in several of the factors in which they are best in. Often, the countries would be in flux as new technologies are discovered, but wouldn't they tend to stratify toward national core competencies?
In this case, it doesn't matter exactly HOW the US stratifies, just that it does in some direction. If it loses its advantage in "K" and multinationals relocate, then it'll restratify toward a more "middle class" society like Canada-- but countries that are "K" abundant would tend to eliminate their middle classes- and countries that are "M" abundant would be stuck focusing on "M" for long periods of time (barring political or social unrest)
I appreciate your response Victor and it makes me feel a lot less as though the world as a whole is headed for a "doomsday scenario" though it does expose severe weaknesses in the United States, which might very well be headed for troubled economic times.
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