business friendly?

Pack66Dad

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The Year Washington Became “Business Friendly”


Monday, December 20, 2010 History will record 2010 as the year Washington became “business friendly.”

Not that it was all that unfriendly before. Some would say the bailouts of Wall Street, AIG, GM, and Chysler were about as friendly as it can get. In addition, Washington gave windfalls to drug companies and health insurers in the new health bill, subsidies to energy companies in the stimulus package, and billions to domestic and military contractors.
But for corporate America it still wasn’t friendly enough. Before the midterm elections, Verizon CEO and Business Roundtable chair Ivan Seidenberg accused the President of creating a hostile environment for investment and job-creation. In the midterms, business leaders overwhelmingly threw their support to Republicans.
So the White House caved in on the Bush tax cuts for the wealthy, and is telling CEOs it will be on their side from now on. As the President recently told a group of CEOs, the choice “is not between Democrats and Republicans. It’s between America and our competitors around the world. We can win the competition.”
There’s only one problem. America’s big businesses are less and less American. They’re going abroad for sales and employees. That’s one reason they’ve showed record-breaking profits in 2010 while creating almost no American jobs.
Consider one of most popular Christmas products of all time – Apple’s iPhone. Researchers from the Asian Development Bank Institute have dissected an iPhone whose wholesale price is around $179.00 to determine where the money actually goes.
Some shows up in Apple’s profits, which are soaring.
About $61 of the $179 price goes to Japanese workers who make key iPhone components, $30 to German workers who supply other pieces, and $23 to South Korean workers who provide still others. Around $6 goes to the Chinese workers who assemble it. Most of the rest goes to workers elsewhere around the globe who make other bits.
Only about $11 of that iPhone goes to American workers, mostly researchers and designers.
Even old-tech American companies made big money abroad in 2010 – and created scads of jobs there. General Motors, for example, is now turning a nice profit and American investors bullish about its future.
That doesn’t mean GM will be creating lots more blue-collar jobs in America, though. 2010 was a banner year for GM’s foreign sales — already two-thirds of its total sales, and rising. In October, GM became first automaker to sell more than 2 million cars a year in China. The company is now making more cars in China than in the United States.And GM has just signed a deal with its Chinese partner to try to crack India’s potentially huge auto market.
Meanwhile, back home in the U.S., GM has slashed its labor costs. New hires are brought in at roughly half the wages and benefits of former GM employees, under a two-tier wage structure accepted by the United Auto Workers. Almost all GM’s U.S. suppliers have also cut their payrolls.
It’s much the same even for America’s biggest retailers. 2010 wasn’t an especially good year for Wal-Mart in the United States. Its third-quarter sales fell, as U.S. shoppers continued to hold back.
But Wal-Mart International is contributing mightily to its bottom line. Its UK business, Asda, will be adding 7,500 new jobs next year. Wal-Mart is also doing well in Japan and Brazil, and hiring like mad in both countries.
So when President Obama tells American CEOs our biggest challenge comes from abroad, you’ve got to wonder. The leaders of American business are already abroad, and doing quite nicely.
Just after the midterm elections, the President’s chief economic advisor, Larry Summers, told a group of top U.S. CEOs that the election was partly a “rejection of elites…that were seen as more citizens of Davos than of their countries.” American CEOs, Summers warned, should “think very hard about their obligations as citizens of this country.”
Yes, they’re citizens. But first and foremost they’re CEOs. And CEOs have to show profits – wherever those profits come from. Under American-style capitalism, profits matter. Jobs don’t.
2010 was the year Washington became even more “business friendly.” The result has been more and better jobs – but not in America.
 
Pack, I'm signing off on responding to these drive by's anymore. You either don't understand the issues or can't defend your positions...not sure which and it doesn't matter, I guess.

Merry Christmas to you and yours.
 
He is educating us! He got this one from a link on the Huffington Post. BTW, I think Arianna Huffington was great in Greene Acres!

[YOUTUBE]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jHOdZoNb7fw&feature=related[/YOUTUBE]
 
Pack, I'm signing off on responding to these drive by's anymore. You either don't understand the issues or can't defend your positions...not sure which and it doesn't matter, I guess.

Merry Christmas to you and yours.

Hey, I don't post responses because its never a discussion, it's just third grade playground name calling. :smt009

Thank you for the Christmas wishes, Merry Christmas to you and yours also. :thumbsup:
 
Set the politics aside on this one. There are some interesting components. We can let the manufacturing and assembly be done overseas but how long before they catch up and start supplying the engineering and design too. Can this country continue to be a leader in design/developement? Can our current educational system generate the future intellectual components or will we begin to lose that "product" too.
 
Set the politics aside on this one. There are some interesting components. We can let the manufacturing and assembly be done overseas but how long before they catch up and start supplying the engineering and design too. Can this country continue to be a leader in design/developement? Can our current educational system generate the future intellectual components or will we begin to lose that "product" too.

Sooner than you think.

There is a TREMENDOUS driver to push engineering and design overseas. I see that everywhere in the petrochemical industry. It is not just the "call centers" that are in India.

In fact, the senior management in my company is providing INCENTIVES to individual projects to push engineering and procurment to low cost countries even when "straight up economics" don't justify the move. Senior management, thinking long term, sees a US based engineering infrastructure as a liability.
 
America's economy would do better, and excell, if Government, paticularly the Federal Government would just get the hell out of the way. The price of goods and services are inflated by so many regulations and mandates it puts the security of all our jobs at stake. Additionally, it provides our competitors with an advantage because they don't have the same cost to comply with their government.

Don
 
Hey, I don't post responses because its never a discussion, it's just third grade playground name calling. :smt009

Thank you for the Christmas wishes, Merry Christmas to you and yours also. :thumbsup:


Then why do you start these post? Not all these guys have resorted to name calling but you ignore their question/comments.
 
Set the politics aside on this one. There are some interesting components. We can let the manufacturing and assembly be done overseas but how long before they catch up and start supplying the engineering and design too. Can this country continue to be a leader in design/developement? Can our current educational system generate the future intellectual components or will we begin to lose that "product" too.

I have seen this in the lumber and fishing industry.

There was a time when salmon were processed at a land based cannery. Lots of jobs. Now all is done aboard a foreign flagged ship, with foreign workers.

In the lumber industry, all we do now is ship logs overseas, they mill them in their mills and then sell the lumber back to us.

Just doesn't make sense. Part if not most of the blame here is on the environmental activist terrorist!
 

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