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What if there was a third world country where people looked and sounded just like us? There were a thousand couples just like your wife and you and they started up websites just like yours but were happy to make $10,000 charging 5 dollars a month for the same product/experience you provide? |
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As for competing with China...S.C. competed with the rest of the world for that BMW plant and won it. You can theorize all you want. But facts are facts. The state gave BMW a great deal. They decided that building the cars in S.C. to sell in the U.S was cheaper that way than building them in China or some other cheap labor country and having to import them into the U.S. Bottom line is that "yes", you can make a more attractive environment for companies and get them to build here. I saw it with my own two eyes. And they aren't the only car company that did that. The Southeastern U.S. is full of Honda, VW, Hyundai, and other company plants building cars...anywhere BUT Detroit because of the unions and the high taxes there. That's why Detroit is a ghost town. |
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Overseas they can do things they cant do here. With one of the iphones something was wrong and had to be addressed. They woke the whole plant up in the middle of the night, gave them a cup of tea and biscuit and put them to work for 16 hrs straight. The Apple guy commented this is amazing you cant get this in America. Technology is the problem not Obama. Instagram was 6 people and worth billions of dollars more than kodak was ever worth and they had hundreds of thousands of workers. Craigslist destroyed the newspaper ad business and that was thousands of jobs replaced by some people working out of a guys house. In ten years there will be self driving cars and kiss all those driving jobs goodbye. What do you do with those people? This is a huge problem no one want to look at. |
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But I don't think it's fair to blame what's happening in Detroit on the republicans or the democrats. Detroit has been in decline since it reached it's population peak in the 1950s, and you cant' really blame that on either side or even the federal government. |
Yeah, Tony...in a sense they did compete with the world.
BMW decided that building in the USA was the right way to go because if they could get tax breaks and no union to deal with it made more sense financially to do it in the USA. That's my whole point. Thank you for helping me make it. Our govt. CAN do something to help bring back jobs. The states have already shown them the way. Unfortunately they seem to be in a Washington D.C. bubble and only know what to do based on who is contributing the most to them. :( And by the way..."technology" is not the problem. Cars are still being built by human beings all over the world. It's DUMB decisions like trying to raise the salary at McDonalds that will get people fired and bring in technology. But that's the service industry and should never be paid that much to begin with. Look at G.E. They have the world's largest jet engine manufacturing plant...in Brazil. That COULD be right here in the United States. How many more like that? Thousands. Our federal govt. (not baby-jesus Obama...but the lifetime politicians in Congress and the Senate) are the ones fucking us. There are things that WORK...like the car companies all over the Southeastern United States building cars and boosting their local economies. And then there are things that don't...like Detroit. Even Stevie Wonder could see it. But yet Washington D.C. just keeps on doing the same thing over and over and over...and expecting a different result. EDIT: Just saw that GE is building a new jet engine plant in Lafayette, Indiana and it will be the 7th in the last few years joining these towns:Batesville, MS; Auburn, AL; Greenville, SC; Dayton, Ohio; Ellisville, MS; and Asheville, NC Hmmmm....I wonder what those states have in common with each other that brought these jobs BACK to the U.S. despite all the excuses you just made about technology and blah-blah-blah? I wonder what it could be...can't quite put my finger on it. All in states and towns that gave them tax breaks and no union. But I wonder why they came back to the U.S.? It's mystifying...at least to Congress in Washington D.C. To the rest of us it's crystal clear. |
fifty Jeep driving retards
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The fact of the matter is that as a nation, we are rich, but people as an average are making less and paying out more for services and taxes.
We can rule our own trade, but it seems we refuse to do so. We trade with countries that make it harder for us to sell in their countries than they can sell in ours. Changing those things and making it a better environment for business to head quarter in our country would make for better jobs. This is where the politicians are failing us |
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If you dont think technology isnt a problem you are kidding yourself. Its a blessing and a curse. |
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It's a proven fact. And yes...BMW is like any other company when it comes to weighing their options financially. Tax breaks, no union headaches...and they built in Greenville/Spartanburg...not Detroit. As for VW in Tennessee...they gave the workers the option to put in the union. They were not FORCED to do that. And the workers said "no". The UAW tried to FORCE them, but failed. And that community has a great employer there now paying great wages and great benefits...without the union's unnecessary expense and hassles. Again...NOT in Detroit. If the environment is correct...business will thrive. People will have jobs. |
We are in the middle of a perfect storm. Right now we are feeling the results of 30+ years of policies that have made it easier and easier for companies to move offshore.
When the recession hit roughly 60% of the jobs lost were middle income jobs, however only 20% of the new jobs created are middle income jobs. Most of the new jobs created are lower income jobs. Why? Because it is easy to do now. Say Company A went out of business during the recession. Things are now looking better so the owner of Company A wants to start again. Now that he has to start from scratch, he has no real reason to start here in US. He can put all of his manufacturing in third world countries and just hire a few people here in the US to run the show. Before maybe he employed 200 people in the US, now he employs 25 and he makes more money than he did before. It will take many changes in our governments polices or it will take a sea change in the cost of offshore labor for that to change. |
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Instead of figuring out ways to try and force people to do shit...maybe the federal govt. should do what the states are doing and figure out ways to ENTICE them to come back. Why do people always think it's cool to force others to do shit? It's almost second nature in the U.S. these days. lol |
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The other day I saw a story where a fishing company based in the US catches fish in US waters then ships them to China (I think, but it might have been a different Asian country) to be processed then they ship them back to be sold here. It is actually cheaper for them to twice ship the fish across the ocean than to open up a plant here and do the processing locally. If I were going start a company that manufactured a product and my choice was between hiring workers in the US for $12-$15 per hour plus the benefits I would have to give them or outsource it where I can pay someone $3 a day and not have to worry about benefits the choice is an easy one to make. It is going to take one hell of an incentive for me to bring that business to the US. I'm not saying it can't be done, it can be, but it is not going to be an easy thing to do. |
When local government units give "corporate welfare" in the form of property tax breaks: Your property taxes on your home (or rental) ratios increase to pay the for the new business' property tax abatement. All property improvements require infrastructure maintenance and public safety services -- who pays the abated taxes? The "non-entitled" residential, manufacturing and commercial landowners -- there are either less services, deficit spending, or property tax rate increases -- someone pays ... |
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before this "evil" corporation came in, there was an empty lot of land with nothing on it... = minimal tax revenue then this "evil" corporation comes in and invests $400M to build a factory, how is the local government any worse off after the factory is built? the corporation probably worked out a deal that they won't pay taxes on that $400M investment for 20 years, but why would that make anyone worse off? it seems pretty clear that everyone is better off, as there are more jobs, more economic activity in general as a result of this $400M investment that was made.... |
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In China...for example...they appear to have few...if any...regulations at all. |
to be their cheap labor? Sukkas ....
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I'm originally from the Detroit area. |
Barry it's not happening like that in the cities with new auto manufacturing plants around the Southeastern United States.
Instead it's creating tons of new high paying jobs and lifting the economy up. |
OP is a face a 2 a asinine.
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Well, that is at the expense of the State of SC and the Counties that offer the tax abatements. |
No it's not "at the expense of SC". The state of S.C. saw the overall tax base grow immensely. The unemployment rate went down. People made good money and had great benefits. And the surrounding areas thrived from the growth of new businesses, homes, etc.
I was there. I saw it. Your theory just isn't true. When govt. drops it oppressiveness and creates a beneficial environment for business to thrive...it lifts the economy. It's not brain surgery to figure that out. Jobs = good. No jobs = bad. As for your ignorant statement about "low wages" You are talking out of your ass on that one. I lived there. I have friends who have been working there for a dozen or more years. They make the best money of their lives. Instead of just commenting, you should research it first |
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The city of Spartanburg, SC - where the plant is located - has a median household income of $28k... Almost half of the national rate of $52k. BMW isn't even in the top ten employers for the city. How is this helpful? |
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You would of been the guy saying you mean to tell me one day when you call a company you wont get a receptionist you will get a machine? Rubbish that will never happen. Im telling you technology lowers the need for people. When I built cars they had robots and that was in the 80's. They spoke about humanless plants and all the benefits. My boss said he had visited one that was experimental, things you dont think about like robots dont need lights or sick days or bathroom breaks. The plant he visited had two guys over seeing the whole plant. |
Tony as I read that situation....the UAW was the one who tried to make the move on that VW plant.
VW said that they did not object. They didn't want to fight with the union. So the workers were given a vote (instead of being FORCED to pay union dues like some places....you know, Detroit). VW did NOT go asking the union to "please come in and take money from our workers to join your union" like you are insinuating. Instead they gave the UAW enough rope to hang itself. Is VW anti-union? No. Neither are any of the car companies that I know of. But what I'm pointing out is that the CURRENT UAW is a huge drain on auto makers and their employees. VW is paying high wages and great benefits to those workers and also helping a hurting economy in that area. The union wanted a piece of that pie. They didn't get it. End of story. Bottom line is that VW felt that they could manufacture cars in that area more profitably than doing it in Mexico or China. And that's just ONE town it's happening in. This is GOOD news. Why are we arguing about it? lol |
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The decline began in early 1974 -- that OPEC Oil embargo caught Detroit by surprise. Add the EPA regulations, with the long period of stagflation caused by President Nixon, Ford and Carter's Administrations and the actions of their respective Congress' bungling (or incompetence). Then add the UAW's bad and in some cases corrupt obstruction and half assed adversarial relationship with the automakers. |
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