By: Fritoeata
David, the Forbes article you referenced can be summarized by saying “Amazon can’t be made in the USA, because everything else is made in domestic China already”. While that is currently true, it would...
View ArticleBy: MAKE | Your Comments
[...] response to MAKE it in China: How to Spot a Good Factory, David Lang [...]
View ArticleBy: ROFL
Don’t believe the corporate propaganda. A country limited to insourcing is a country where only large corporations can succeed and edge out startups. Could you afford the minimum run on a product made...
View ArticleBy: haha
Indeed, the process is good for you and one other person exploiting people for you, but bad for the value of your savings. Notably, when everyone does this your community runs up a $1 trillion dollar...
View ArticleBy: Merenguele
I agree with David and Lisa, all what is said in the text is about how to help your business (quality and reliance) and the people who work in that factory and who own that factory. As a person...
View ArticleBy: Debt monger
You’re kidding, right? No? Sigh. The outstanding public debt for the US is not 1 trillion dollars, it is over sixteen trillion. It sounds like you are confusing the terms “debt” and “deficit”. I’m glad...
View ArticleBy: greggie
Giving someone a job is exploitation? Is that the case in the US also? The numbers suggest that workers in China have more discretionary income as a percentage than workers in the US do.
View ArticleBy: lol
This is not a long run consumer behavior argument, but rather the aggregate outcome of domestic policy. Most of the “debt” you refer to is held in bonds by resident US citizens as investment. There is...
View ArticleBy: lol
Your informal fallacy ignores giving someone a universally consistent wage that reduces global inflation, and fixes an opportunity cost of a global work force. It is still unethical and unprofitable...
View ArticleBy: greggie
Wrong again, US resident citizen bondholders do not hold a majority of US public debt, only about a third. Look it up. I never said profit equaled value growth. But receiving goods for lower than the...
View ArticleBy: Sous Vide Device Co-Inventor Lisa Q. Fetterman Headed to White House...
[…] States and China to start production of Nomiku, and it was from this experience that Lisa learned how to spot a good factory and tips and tricks for a successful trip to manufacturing metropolis...
View ArticleBy: haha
Indeed, the process is good for you and one other person exploiting people for you, but bad for the value of your savings. Notably, when everyone does this your community runs up a $1 trillion dollar...
View ArticleBy: Merenguele
I agree with David and Lisa, all what is said in the text is about how to help your business (quality and reliance) and the people who work in that factory and who own that factory. As a person...
View ArticleBy: Debt monger
You’re kidding, right? No? Sigh. The outstanding public debt for the US is not 1 trillion dollars, it is over sixteen trillion. It sounds like you are confusing the terms “debt” and “deficit”. I’m glad...
View ArticleBy: greggie
Giving someone a job is exploitation? Is that the case in the US also? The numbers suggest that workers in China have more discretionary income as a percentage than workers in the US do.
View ArticleBy: lol
This is not a long run consumer behavior argument, but rather the aggregate outcome of domestic policy. Most of the “debt” you refer to is held in bonds by resident US citizens as investment. There is...
View ArticleBy: lol
Your informal fallacy ignores giving someone a universally consistent wage that reduces global inflation, and fixes an opportunity cost of a global work force. It is still unethical and unprofitable...
View ArticleBy: greggie
Wrong again, US resident citizen bondholders do not hold a majority of US public debt, only about a third. Look it up. I never said profit equaled value growth. But receiving goods for lower than the...
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