Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article et,
Maxprop wrote: "Bob Crantz" wrote in message East Asia allies doubt U.S. could win war with China Sure it could. All the US would have to do is pull the plug on Chinese goods, the majority of which go to the USA. China would collapse in economic ruin within months. g Nice theory, except that you'd have to wait, say, 5 years or so to replace all those imports from somewhere else. Your domestic manufacturing capacity for consumer goods is, shall we say, minimal? Ditto the patience and attention span of your consumers. How else can one explain the success of places like Home Depot and Walmart? PDW |
#2
![]()
posted to alt.sailing.asa
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Peter Wiley" wrote in message . .. In article et, Maxprop wrote: "Bob Crantz" wrote in message East Asia allies doubt U.S. could win war with China Sure it could. All the US would have to do is pull the plug on Chinese goods, the majority of which go to the USA. China would collapse in economic ruin within months. g Nice theory, except that you'd have to wait, say, 5 years or so to replace all those imports from somewhere else. Your domestic manufacturing capacity for consumer goods is, shall we say, minimal? Minimal may be an overstatement. We've done a fine job of exporting nearly every manufacturing job short of the high-tech and/or large industrial end of things. However, a friend, who is an importer of foreign low-tech goods, tells me that India, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and many other SE Asian countries would dearly love to replace China as our major supplier of such goods. Mexico, some Central and South American countries continually bid for the business as well. But it's not so simple as it seems. If we pulled our low-tech goods production entirely from the Chinese, they'd probably attack us. Ditto the patience and attention span of your consumers. How else can one explain the success of places like Home Depot and Walmart? Simple, really. Our consumers place little or no value on quality service, rather choosing low price and one-stop shopping as an alternative. In the 1960s and 70s, small towns and villages across the USA watched as ma & pa business and shops closed, unable to compete with the K-Marts and other so-called superstores. Now we're stuck with them and have almost no alternatives. Max |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Bird crap? | ASA | |||
Mooron Throw away that Rambo Crap | ASA | |||
Wilma. Crap. | General |