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The Death Of American Manufacturing

It’s not what you think:

One frequent and frustrating line that often crops up in the comments section of this blog is that American labor has no hope, it should just accept Chinese wages, since price is all that matters. That line of thinking is wrongheaded on multiple levels. It assumes direct factory labor is the most important cost driver, when for most manufactured goods, it is 11% to 15% of total product cost (and increased coordination costs of much more expensive managers are a significant offset to any savings achieved by using cheaper factory workers in faraway locations). It also assumes cost is the only way to compete, when that is naive on an input as well as a product level. How do these “labor cost is destiny” advocates explain the continued success of export powerhouse Germany? Finally, the offshoring,/outsourcing vogue ignores the riskiness and lower flexibility of extended supply chains.

This argument is sorely misguided because it serves to exculpate diseased, greedy, and incompetent American managers and executives. In the overwhelming majority of places where I lived in my childhood, a manufacturing plant was the biggest employer in the community. And when I went to business school, manufacturing was still seen as important. Indeed, the rise of Germany and Japan was then seen as due to sclerotic American management not being able to keep up with their innovations in product design and factory management.

But if you were to ask most people, they’d now blame the fall of American manufacturing on our workers. That scapegoating serves to shift focus from the top of the food chain at a time when executives have managed to greatly widen the gap between their pay and that of the folks reporting to them.

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Paul Krugman On Economic Justice

Paul Krugman On Economic Justice

Said much more eloquently than I ever could.

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Rioters Versus Bankers

Rioters Versus Bankers Political Cartoon

Amateurs.

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Keynes vs Hayek

A cute little video, even if it seems to strawman Keynes a bit. For those of you not familiar with Hayek, here is a wikipedia article. He basically was one of the founders of the laissez-faire Austrian school now commonly associated with Ron Paul and the libertarian bunch. At the same time, he also wrote “probably nothing has done so much harm to the liberal cause as the wooden insistence of some liberals on certain rules of thumb, above all of the principle of laissez-faire capitalism.” According to Wikipedia, there is a term for the kind of limited governmental interference into the market, and that is ordoliberalism. Basically in ordoliberalism, the government’s role is to set the rules by which the market can operate, and those rules should be designed to encourage competition.

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A Country On The Edge: The Collapse Of Greece

A Country On The Edge: The Collapse Of Greece

I spent four months living in Athens from January 2011 to May 2011. Despite impressions to the contrary, Athens is not a beautiful European city. It was constructed predominantly in the 1950’s and 1960’s — an era that could not exactly be called the pinnacle of beauty in architecture. Many of the older buildings that weren’t destroyed by the Nazi’s in WWII were destroyed during the building boom that followed.

What it lacks in physical assets it makes up for in its history and the drama of the situation the country (of which Athens is overwhelmingly the most important part) faces. The astounding amount of debt they are responsible for poses a threat not just to the viability of the country, but of the entire Eurozone, and by extension the whole European Union project. The eyes of the world fall on this one tiny country with the power to break the most impressive and successful political and economic alliance potentially in all of history.

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