Monday, July 18, 2005

 
Okay, before you tell me I don't understand economics I stipulate to that point. The following is the comment of a typically underinformed American consumer.

A column I read today in the New York Times addresses (allbeit indirectly) a question I've had for a while: Why is it better for me to buy a product (say, a Chevy) made in Korea with the label of an American company than to buy a product (say, a Toyota) made in the US with a foreign label? Doesn't the Toyota support more American workers? I'm totally not interested in contributing to the bloated compensation of American management if my purchase doesn't even put food on the tables of any US workers.

Op-Ed Contributor (excerpt) "America's Truth Deficit"

Published: July 18, 2005

Washington

"...on the crucial question of how policy makers define "national interest," Washington stands alone. Western Europe, whatever its problems, manages economic policy to maintain modest trade surpluses. Japan manages to insure far larger surpluses in recessions (its export income subsidizes inefficient domestic employers). China strives to acquire a larger, more advanced industrial base at the expense of worker incomes and bank profits. Germany and Japan, despite vast differences, both manage to keep advanced manufacturing sectors anchored at home and to defend domestic wage levels and social guarantees. When they do disperse production and jobs overseas, as they must, they do so strategically.

By contrast, Washington defines "national interest" primarily in terms of advancing the global reach of our multinational enterprises. Elites are persuaded by the reigning orthodoxy that subsidiary domestic interests will ultimately benefit too. The distinctive power of America's globalized companies is reflected in trade patterns. Nearly half of American exports and imports are not traded in open markets - the price auction idealized by neoclassical economics - but within the companies themselves, moving materials and components back and forth among their far-flung factories. A trade deficit does not show on the company's balance sheet, only on the nation's. In recent years, much of the trade deficit has reflected the value-added production and jobs that companies moved elsewhere...."

So somebody tell me (this is Dorothy again) how I benefit from buying the Chevy....



Comments:
so, ok, buy the Toyota. yer right and its a good car. I especially like the Scion tc....Where is it made?
 
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