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mindlight

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The US tariff war with the rest of the world has highlighted the rise of Chinese trade dominance and the destruction of competitors by Chinese companies worldwide.

The Chinese strategy has been :
  1. steal the design
  2. reverse engineer the design
  3. mass produce in home market and build up corporate presence there
    go international:
  4. destroy local competition with subsidized goods
  5. raise prices and profits when locals destroyed
  6. Buy up competitor firms with profits made

The Western world has been remarkably blind to this strategy and done little to counter it. Now many fear it might be too late for a great many industries. But the USA has the economic weight to take on China and is now doing so in an effort to re-shore jobs and industry. It is doing this for entirely selfish reasons but it raises the question of how Europe should also be dealing with China.

Can Trump break Chinese dominance or is it already too late?
What should America's allies be doing for their part in this trade war?
Should they stay aligned with the USA or adopt their own approach? Should Europe impose a similar tariff regime on competitors and develop a regional self-sufficiency or stay globalized in their outlook?

The consideration here is that in many cases Chinese products help keep prices low for the poorest members of a society versus the destruction of local jobs and industries that often results. Can we avoid a strategic overdependence on China and the wholesale massacre of local industries without losing out on the obvious advantages of trading with this massive and growing market?
 
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Walmart perfected #4 & #5 long before China.

Not in Europe they didn't. The difference is that China is doing this globally also not just locally. The days have long gone when American companies like Ford are competitive in the European market.
 
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Aryeh Jay

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Not in Europe they didn't. The difference is that China is doing this globally also not just locally.

Why would someone pay $2500.00 for a German made chainsaw when they can get a Chinese version in the exact color scheme and a slight difference in the spelling for a hundred bucks. Probably just as good.
 
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Laodicean60

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It is doing this for entirely selfish reasons but it raises the question of how Europe should also be dealing with China.
You're darn right, as should all countries. If the EU wants to war with Russia or China and God forbid both, do you think you have the manufacturing capacity to replace lost equipment? The USA doesn't, so I'm assuming you guys don't, and the sad thing is we've known this since 2010.
how Europe should also be dealing with China.
I'll play prophet: Some countries might kiss up to them because of your energy woes; the EU shouldn't have gone all in with their "enemy." Sadly, German deindustrialization is happening because of their energy woes.
It is doing this for entirely selfish reasons but it raises the question of how Europe should also be dealing with China.
It may be selfish to some, but I see a national security issue, and the USA wants strong partners in NATO also, thus the talk of military spending for all these years.
The consideration here is that in many cases Chinese products help keep prices low for the poorest members of a society versus the destruction of local jobs and industries that often results. Can we avoid a strategic overdependence on China and the wholesale massacre of local industries without losing out on the obvious advantages of trading with this massive and growing market?
What you are seeing today is a global economic realignment, and it's going to be hard on the people of all nations. If you can come up with intelligent questions, I'm sure your leaders are asking themselves similar questions. We'll see in the future, but I can tell you this: it's not about Trump.
I use an analogy of puppies hanging on mamas dog's (Russia/ China) tit and the puppies now are the USA/ EU.

One of those questions is: Will we be able to fight a sustained war with China or Russia? I've watched the West's arrogance throughout the years in that we think we can dictate whatever we want with Russia or China, and we are still doing it.
 
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You're darn right, as should all countries. If the EU wants to war with Russia or China and God forbid both, do you think you have the manufacturing capacity to replace lost equipment? The USA doesn't, so I'm assuming you guys don't, and the sad thing is we've known this since 2010.

I'll play prophet: Some countries might kiss up to them because of your energy woes; the EU shouldn't have gone all in with their "enemy." Sadly, German deindustrialization is happening because of their energy woes.

It may be selfish to some, but I see a national security issue, and the USA wants strong partners in NATO also, thus the talk of military spending for all these years.

What you are seeing today is a global economic realignment, and it's going to be hard on the people of all nations. If you can come up with intelligent questions, I'm sure your leaders are asking themselves similar questions. We'll see in the future, but I can tell you this: it's not about Trump.
I use an analogy of puppies hanging on mamas dog's (Russia/ China) tit and the puppies now are the USA/ EU.

One of those questions is: Will we be able to fight a sustained war with China or Russia? I've watched the West's arrogance throughout the years in that we think we can dictate whatever we want with Russia or China, and we are still doing it.
German manufacturing remains strong with high quality globally competitive products. We run trade surpluses because we are so good and people want our stuff. Where are the stats for deindustrialization? This seems like Russian propaganda or Republican wishful thinking

 
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Laodicean60

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German manufacturing remains strong with high quality globally competitive products. We run trade surpluses because we are so good and people want our stuff.
I agree that Germany is a manufacturing engine for the EU, sort of like California or Texas is for the USA.
Where are the stats for deindustrialization?
I don't have stats, but I do have headlines. I try to keep up with economics, especially global, because we are globally synchronised.
This seems like Russian propaganda or Republican wishful thinking
Why would anyone want to see Germany fall? Is this how bad the hate has gotten in politics?
 
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I agree that Germany is a manufacturing engine for the EU, sort of like California or Texas is for the USA.

I don't have stats, but I do have headlines. I try to keep up with economics, especially global, because we are globally synchronised.

Why would anyone want to see Germany fall? Is this how bad the hate has gotten in politics?

The price of oil is coming down again and was $55 a barrel last time I looked. This is good news for the old-style energy-intensive industries like mechanical engineering, chemicals, cars, where Germany has dominated in the last decades but where they have suffered in the last few years. Many of these products were made for export, so local Germans do not always feel the pain of reductions. We just need to avoid a deal with the USA to buy overpriced LNG and we should be OK for the next few years. In the meantime, the German economy has not shrunk overall, with big growth in e-mobility, renewable energy, IT and cybersecurity, healthcare and biotech, and artificial intelligence. Our defense industry is now on the edge of a boom with large-scale finance coming in the next ten years. My own company is in the Mittelstand and has doubled in size the last ten years and supplies half the biggest customers in the DACH region now. Germany is uniquely placed to benefit not only from a restored manufacturing sector benefitting from low energy prices but in just about every other sector also. Local telecoms companies are booming and we are well positioned for the shift to green energy, which will eventually come for all of us.
 
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Why would someone pay $2500.00 for a German made chainsaw when they can get a Chinese version in the exact color scheme and a slight difference in the spelling for a hundred bucks. Probably just as good.
Mine was called "Home"something. It was fine for what I needed and I ran out of trees. (Almost, it broke down cutting up the last tree I needed it for. I finished it off with a bow saw.
 
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Desk trauma

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Why would someone pay $2500.00 for a German made chainsaw when they can get a Chinese version in the exact color scheme and a slight difference in the spelling for a hundred bucks. Probably just as good.
Because they don’t have the sense to buy a Swedish one. My family has a husqvarna that’s soon going to be passed to and wielded by a third generation, much to the forests chagrin.
 
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Aryeh Jay

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Because they don’t have the sense to buy a Swedish one. My family has a husqvarna that’s soon going to be passed to and wielded by a third generation, much to the forests chagrin.
I've heard of those. Not a fan of plastic.
 
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Because they don’t have the sense to buy a Swedish one. My family has a husqvarna that’s soon going to be passed to and wielded by a third generation, much to the forests chagrin.
Pros use the German brand Stihl which has a worldwide reputation. A top-quality chainsaw like a MS 290 Farm Boss will only cost you under 700 dollars but you can get smaller ones much cheaper from the same company.
 
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Aryeh Jay

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Pros use the German brand Stihl which has a worldwide reputation. A top-quality chainsaw like a MS 290 Farm Boss will only cost you under 700 dollars but you can get smaller ones much cheaper from the same company.
1000007430.jpg


This is one of mine, 660. It does what it's supposed to do.
 
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