"N2EY"  wrote in message 
... 
 In article   k.net, "Bill 
 Sohl"  writes: 
 
 There's no sign that any sufficient number of folks in 
 the USA are going to boycott non-USA made products 
 or spend N dollars more to get a product "made in the USA' 
 as opposed to buying a cheaper imported product. 
 
 That can change, though. 
  
   In the long run, those currently 
   cheap off shore labor markets will self adjust upwards. 
  
  Maybe. And if so, might they not find themselves in the same boat? 
  
 Like I said, global economy. 
 
 As long as we're not on a sinking ship.. 
  
   In the short 
   run, US labor has their head in the sand if they think there's 
something 
   either party (Dems or Reps) can really do to stem the shift of 
   manufacturing jobs overseas.  The same thing is going on in Europe. 
  
  OTOH, unemployed workers can't buy the goods anyway. So what good are 
  lower prices? 
  
   In the long run, employees must be constantly reevaluating their 
   job skills and looking at the prospect of how vulnerable their job 
   may be as to their job being farmed out to off shore labor. 
   
  That's true up to a point. But how often is it reasonable to expect a 
  person to retrain? And what happens to "the wealth of nations" in the 
  meantime? 
  
 You retrain whenever it becomes necessary.  There's nothing 
 mystical about it.  If your job skill goes wanting, you'd 
 better find another skill set. 
 
 How often is reasonable and practical? A lot of things cannot be learned 
 overnight. Inexperience and the lack of judgement that can result pose 
major 
 threats. 
 
Consider the overall change in technology for almost anything. 
Wholesale change almost every 15/20 years.  If I hadn't had the 
opportunity to learn semiconductors via additional training in the 
Navy (1967) and then a full array of digital theory and application 
compliments of  "ma bell", I'd probably be pushing a broom 
somewhere. 
 
 And who pays for the retraining? 
 
It depends.  Even in telecommunications, the old days of heavy 
training costs per employee are gone. 
 
  I don't know of any country that grew prosperous on a service economy 
  alone. 
  
 We still manufacture and produce in the USA, it is just 
 done with more and more automation resulting in less 
 and less need for skilled labor. 
 
 We manufacture and produce some things, but much of the production - 
automated 
 and all - is moving to places like China. 
 
 And the concept of planned obsolescence has been reinvented.... 
 
The obsolescence isn't planned...it just happens.  Look at the 
ever newer, faster and more memory for PCs.  Consider too that 
a few years back, marketing considered anything under $300 
to be an "impulse buy" (i.e. no real thought as to price vs value 
is applied by the consumer). 
 
Cheers, 
Bill K2UNK 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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