uziq wrote:
you'd feel differently about it if you lived in flint, michigan and didn't have giant socialised workfare schemes to remunerate and educate you.
commie
So we should keep the factories open just because people live there? That's stupid and you know it. Their parents and grandparents moved to the city because they heard there was work there. They can do the same and move to where the work is instead of whining incessantly about "they took ur jerbs". The people who live in the Rust Belt did themselves in. The union employees wanted to work as little as possible while making the most money they could (completely rational, but self defeating).
When the US was the only major manufacturer after the war, they could get away with it. After the Japanese entered the market, they couldn't and the companies eventually went bankrupt. Any idiot in the third world can follow a robot around all day and produce a basic commodity car. If you're charging a premium for your labor like the unionized line workers were, you better be adding value to the product with your superior skills, and they neither possessed those those skills not added anything to the product except cost. The only way any manufacturer in the developed world can compete is if they producing non-commodities, and American cars were as shoddy as any commoditized item.
Where the developed world has an edge is in artisan industries that require high skill levels, and thus cost more. This is where a country like Germany shines. I will, and have, happily paid three times as much for a pair of Made in Germany Knipex pliers instead of the shitty Chinese manufactured Stanley stuff. I've bought saws and planes made in Sheffield, because it's quality. I have Made in America Klein screwdrivers because they're amazing. When I bought a pair of Doc Martens a few years ago I even paid the $25 extra for the Made in England version. My kitchen knives were made in Japan from Swedish steel. Better quality.
Most people don't have the luxury or the desire to care about quality though. They'd rather buy the cheapest item possible, which is fine if you're poor, but sad if you're not. But a lot of people do. They're the ones that read reviews on everything before they make a purchase. They're the ones that are willing to spend a little more for a durable item. Those are the people that can be catered to by home industry. Mass production will always devolve to the lowest labor bidder.
Last edited by Jay (2016-05-30 10:51:47)