TheTexan
Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2011
- Messages
- 27,489
We do buy stupid plastic stuff from them, because they can make those things more efficiently than we can (and - again - I'm not arguing on behalf of the current quote-unquote free trade paradigm, but, for the sake of argument...)
That's just the thing- in terms of human manpower, we can make that stuff just as efficiently as they can. Exactly the same amount of human effort.
They aren't any better at it than we are.
They are just poor.
That's their economic advantage: they are poor and desperate.
That's not a "specialization" in the sense that Adam Smith was envisioning.
We're securing our wealth by purchasing goods that we want, by discerning that they can provide it at a more economical cost. You refer to "we" and "them", but I'm not sure how I'm benefitted by thinking of "the Chinese" as "them" and people here as "us: I want a good; other people have that good to offer to me at various prices. So, again, why shouldn't I seek that good at the most economical price?
This logic is fair. However it does not address the counterpoints of protectionism. Protectionism asserts that by reducing imports and keeping manufacturing domestically, it raises wages across the board for the protectionist nation. Logic and basic economics back that up as indisputably true.
Which however begs the question: does it raise wages enough, to counter-balance the opportunity cost of buying stuff from China? It's a complicated question with complicated math - I don't know the answer, and I think anyone who says they do know the answer is full of shit.
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