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On Dec 26, 10:03*am, Dave wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 09:31:20 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll said: bad part is with this no wharehousing idea the slow down hits a much larger pool than it should. Not following you here. With just in time systems, when the stock on the shelves is sold the retailer has to crank up his suppliers faster because there's nothing in the warehouse to sell off first. the factories dont have any storage so the line works only when there is a demand. no demand, no work, no mony for goods, factory closes down, no jobs, no money for goods, no demand. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Dec 26, 12:51*pm, Dave wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 10:53:17 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll said: bad part is with this no wharehousing idea the slow down hits a much larger pool than it should. Not following you here. With just in time systems, when the stock on the shelves is sold the retailer has to crank up his suppliers faster because there's nothing in the warehouse to sell off first. the factories dont have any storage so the line works only when there is a demand. no demand, no work, no mony for goods, factory closes down, no jobs, no money for goods, no demand. So you're looking at the finished goods inventory, not raw material, *and you're *thinking that it would be better to build up excess finished goods inventories that would have to be sold down before additional production starts, and to pay the additional capital costs of carrying those inventories over the long term? we dont even have raw materials in storage. most buisness have reworked in the last twenty years to near on demand. this means there is no real backup. if the thread makers are waiting for the weavers to order thread and the weavers are waiting for an order of calico and no order comes in the weavers dont work, the thread makers dont work, the spinners dont work and the cotton farmer is stuck with barn full of stuff he cant sell. it all just goes systemic. warehousing provided a backup to an extent and allowed for the trade in goods that could be bought short in one place a sold long in another. the current model allows flexability to hit fads and trends quickly but it was never ment to handle scarcity and recession. if the weavers produce no cloth then the seamstresses dont work. with no one working no one can make money and it just gets worse. |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Dec 28, 2:37*pm, Dave wrote:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 14:19:56 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll said: the current model allows flexability to hit fads and trends quickly but it was never ment to handle scarcity and recession. if the weavers produce no cloth then the seamstresses dont work. with no one working no one can make money and it just gets worse. Perhaps you should become a consultant to the domestic weavers g. I wouldn't hire you, but they say there's a sucker born.. each to his own. i hear yall bitching and i am not. one of us must be right. |
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