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![]() wrote in message ... On Thu, 30 Sep 2010 23:16:03 -0700, "nom=de=plume" wrote: wrote in message The issue is not monetary policy, it is a decline in our capacity to produce things we can sell the world. These days most of our exports to China are raw materials. We sell them scrap iron and they sell us consumer goods. The real profit is in the manufacturing, not collecting and shipping scrap iron. Actually, the situation with China is improving... http://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/...5700.html#1990 Which isn't something I really considered. Look at the timeline... Yeah I looked. In 1895 we exported 99% of what we imported from China Through most of the 2000s the range was 16-20%. In 2009 it was 26% and it was 25% this year so far with the traditional largest quarter yet to be reported. Is that the trend you were talking about? The difference between the imports and exports changed significantly in 2001 and beyond. This year it will be slightly worse. The sky isn't falling, at least not very quickly, and given that we've pretty much always had a trade imbalance, I think that's a fair assessment. China is in better shape to come out of a global depression than we are and they will own the world when they do. No they aren't. They're a much more rigid society. Millions would die if their economy went bust. They have 1.3 billion, they can afford to lose a few million but it is unlikely it would be that bad. A global depression and fionancial collapse could set us back over 100 years. For most of China it would just set them back a decade or so and they are better equipped to recover. Wow... you're a great humanitarian! A few million here and there... after a while it becomes a bad thing I guess... with apologies to Everett Dirksen. War is hell. We have seen the Chinese fight before. Losing people is not a big deal to them. But, it's ok with you, apparently. So, we have a few (regrettable) suicides, more people are unemployed for a time, more people lose their homes, perhaps even bread lines, and in contrast millions die in China, so that means, according to your logic the Chinese fair better???? The rich people here will be fine, they already operate quite well in the global economy. It will be your middle class that becomes serfs in a neo-colonial America growing food, cutting wood and mining materials for China. To some extent we already are. The rich people are usually fine. So what. The middle class would be hurt but would recover. Recover doing what? This isn't 1929. Our problem is not excess capacity with no place to sell it. We don't have the ability to produce much. We sold our factories to Mexico and China. The facts just don't support this statement. Go to any store, pick up just about anything and see where it came from. So, you want us to compete to make plastic toys? Well, actually, what gets produced here doesn't usually have a lead problem. In the 90s.we thought we would dominate the world in the internet business but we found out there is really not much employment there. One guy sitting at a PC arranging drop shipments from Asia is not as much of an employer as a whole brick and mortar store chain, then they figured out the guy on the PC could be overseas too. (Clinton's recession) In the 2000s we filled that gap building houses, until the market was so flooded that we may not work through the inventory for years to come. (the current recession) Now we are just staring into the hole that used to be American industry and wondering what is next? This is yet again a case of Chicken Little (no offense intended). OK everything is fine, thanks, now I know my kids will be OK. Economies was and wane. There are plenty of things we export. http://www.suite101.com/content/top-...s-2009-a204269 This seems like a good list to me... # Civilian aircraft including parts . US$74.7 billion, up 1% from 2008 (7.1% of total US exports) # Medicinal, dental and pharmaceutical preparations . $46.1 billion, up 14.1% (4.4%) # Semiconductors . $37.5 billion, down 26% (3.5%) # Other industrial machines . $30.9 billion, down 19.1% (2.9%) # Automotive parts and accessories . $30 billion, down 24.6% (2.8%) # Telecommunications equipment . $28.7 billion, down 12.6% (2.7%) # Passenger cars . $27.5 billion, down 44.5% (2.6%) # Medicinal equipment . $26.9 billion, down 0.5% (2.5%) # Electric apparatus . $26.1 billion, down 15.5% (2.5%) # Plastic materials . $25.5 billion, down 19.3% (2.4%). 8 of the top 10 are going down. Not an encouraging trend. |
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