Originally posted by: techs
Wow, did you miss the boat on this one.
First off you are confusing specialization with outsourcing.
It is impossible for one person to learn to build everything they need. So we specialize in a particular area.
You are also completey ignorant of markets when comparing the idea of buying items from diffferent states, with the same general wealth and trade rules and nations with vastly different political and economic situations..
Therefore, nations are different.
In general when you buy, say, a pair of shoes made in another state, the money goes to pay a worker in your nation.
Why is this important? Because you neglect to mention where your money comes from to buy the shoes.
It comes from that shoebuilder buying the product you make (maybe not directly, he may buy another product and that person buys from you)
This works in nations because we play by the same rules and are of a roughly equal economic level and political level.
What happens when you buy your shoes from China?
China artificially holds down the value of their currency (the most important part of Capitalism is Capital).
And China has severe import restrictions on what you produce.
So the money that goes to China leaves the American currency nation and goes to China.
Eventually a few things will happen.
One, much of American wealth will be in China.
Two, and most importantly the people who buy your product lose their jobs and can't afford to buy your product. Lowering your income.
Three, people who livin in dictatorships cannot choose to protect their lives with environment legislation, and other choices free people make, forver unbalancing the fairness of trade with that country. This creates an unbalanced system that ensures America will never be able to compete.
Etc, etc.
You have also confused Efficiency with Cheapness.
China is NOT an efficient manufacturing country. The US is one of the most efficient manufacturing countries in the world.
In China human life and wages are so Cheap that factories there are labor intensive. It takes far more workers to produce a product in China. The reason manufacturing goes there is that is cheaper to use manpower than efficient production machines. This is almost unprecedented in the world since the industrial age began. Efficient mechanized factories being replaced with cheap manual labor. It's a huge step BACKWARD in efficiency.
I think you hit on a key problem with economic ideal of specialization. In a perfect world, there would be no difference between specialization and outsourcing, "outsourcing" would simply be specialization on a world-wide scale. But the problem is that the reason it works in theory is that the theory says you have an economic "circle" of sorts...when group B makes a good group A needs, group A makes a good group B needs. If they buy from each other, it doesn't matter whether it's between states or between countries, each group supports the industry that the other group is comparitivly better at.
But we do not opperate in a perfect economic situation, our largest trading partners are NOT playing by the same rules, especially China. Through import restrictions and controls from their central bank, they try to limit how much they import without placing similar restrictions on what they export. So China is essentially ignoring the benefits of comparitive advantage and national specialization, except when it means they can sell something to someone else. Japan has done a smiliar thing for years, they export tons of products to the US, but refuse to import many things from us, even things we do much better than they do (growing food, for example).
The upshot of all this is that the economic models don't apply, becausee the situation they describe does not exist in real life. Free trade is certainly good, but not when only one party is doing it. We export our labor in certain areas, and while OTHER areas should make up for that, they might not because huge foreign markets are essentially closed to our business. Don't get me wrong, this is bad for those foreign countries as well, because they waste huge amounts of resources doing things that we could do far better for them (again, Japan trying to grow their own food being the best example). In the long run, nobody wins.
