Treetop wrote:Do your ideals of free trade with nations that literally dont have free or fair trade over ride the lives of your countrymen during a crisis? You might save a few bucks in good times but in bad you just dont get your products. Is it truly worth it for those ideals? Out of democrats, republicans and libertarians or greens I side with libertarians most often but as I see it they are insanely wrong on this and dangerously so.
Total straw man. The difference is not "a few bucks." The difference is a drastic increase in the quality of life in this country over the last 30+ years. Even the poorest households in the US have refrigerators and (cell) phones, which was not the case prior to increased trade with Asia. Everybody advances faster when there is specialization and free trade in an economy. The Chinese people, overall, also benefit from increased work in their country. Their quality of life is also on the rise. Obviously not to the level of the US, and not for everybody in China (and it won't ever get there under communist rule), but increased trade has benefited a lot of people in China. Trading with a country does not mean you condone or endorse their government anyway.
I have not defended China's actions surrounding the coronavirus at all. They have obviously handled this very poorly and have put the entire world at greater risk by delaying and hiding information.
68Camaro wrote:Tariffs, or not, are not a factor in the US coronavirus battle - if tariffs in the context of coronavirus are being raised by anti-tariff folks that is a complete red herring . The fact is that the US is willing to buy any supplies we are short on at almost any price - any tariffs that might apply are trivial by comparison. And we could have both bought the needed stockpiles in advance, but didn't, as well as retained sufficient domestic production, but didn't.
Tariffs are not a factor now because they have been suspended. They were a factor in what supplies we had on hand prior to the start of the coronavirus battle. Tariffs led to higher prices which led to a shrinking inventory of medical supplies. Higher prices incentivize less consumption. With the US government tacking on a cut, hospitals bought less. At current usage rates we are probably only talking about an extra day or two worth of supplies, barely a dent in the overall demand for this event. But that's still a day or two worth of supplies that were not on hand because the money that would have been used to purchase those supplies instead went to the federal government in the form of a tax.
Treetop wrote:"Leading US manufacturers of medical safety gear told the White House that China prohibited them from exporting their products from the country as the coronavirus pandemic mounted — even as Beijing was trying to “corner the world market” in personal protective equipment, The Post has learned.
Yep, that's bad. Evidently magic tariffs didn't stop this though.
New York is seizing supplies from private hospitals and is reportedly seizing shipments of supplies coming through the harbor that other states ordered. The US has teams of buyers overseas stepping in and buying up supplies that were already ordered by and destined for other countries. We bought a bunch of stuff out from under France. Our federal government is ORDERING domestic manufacturers to make supplies for the federal government and PROHIBITING them from fulfilling existing orders for other customers, including other national governments. So the US is doing exactly the same thing China did.
Thogey wrote:Raise your hand if you have done business personally with mainland chinamen? My hand is up and my experience has shown me, their definition of dealing in good faith is much different than mine.
I have, as have many of our domestic customers and of course all of our domestic suppliers. I have personally only dealt with a handful of Chinese suppliers directly and haven't had any major problems. But I am also well aware of the type of counterfeiting and scamming that goes on.
One of our customers did have major problems a couple years ago when the Chinese factory that he (and several of his largest US competitors) used suddenly shut its doors. It took about six months to set up new factories and get his tooling out of the old factory. His business took a big hit. But his business wouldn't exist in its current form without China. It would be less than a quarter of what it is today. There simply isn't a market for the rest of the goods at US-made prices. It's not that they would be 20% more if made in the US. They would be at least 300% - 500% more and nobody would buy them. That is a far more common situation than some of you guys seem to think.
We have a customer here in Pennsylvania who is originally from India and he assures us that India is much worse to deal with than China. He originally moved here with his parents and kept his manufacturing in India, but later moved his manufacturing here so he, and I quote, "didn't have to deal with those crooks anymore"
There are honest and dishonest people no matter where you go. Personally the most difficult manufacturer I've had to deal with is one in Italy
and the only businesses that have actually screwed us over are other US businesses.
Does relying on China for so much manufacturing make us more vulnerable to things like pandemics? Yes. Would we be better prepared if we had more domestic manufacturing capacity for certain products? Yes. Are tariffs going to fix that? No way.
Treetop wrote:A country that steal our intellectual property which is our best asset in a global market. It hurt them enough they appear atleast close to maybe possibly ending some of their games. Probably not but atleast we tried.
The entire landscape for intellectual property changed with the widespread adoption of computer design, programming, and the internet. IP is not what it once was and we can't go back. There are still successful companies and products that rely on closely held IP, but that business model is shrinking. In its place we have a whole new economy of open source projects and products. Globally collaborative designs and rapid prototyping have enabled much faster iterative testing and product development, and some of the most secure and most widely used software is open source. Any small company can coordinate manufacturing from a laptop on their kitchen table. Consumers get better products, faster, and for less. Governments and IP laws have not kept up with technology. The biggest barrier to entry in nearly every market, the most stifling force, is the US government.
"At least we tried" is an emotional argument, not a logical argument.
Yeah, maybe the math doesn't work, maybe the strategy doesn't even make sense, but we HAVE TO TRY SOMETHING!!!! That doesn't make sense. The trade war is the right's "Green New Deal"