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Michael Magoon's avatar

Very interesting article. I would be interested in knowing why the British shipbuilding industry in the 19th Century was able to build ships using far fewer labor-hours than the US.

Oh, yes, and congrats on the Guest post at Noahpinion. I hope that it helps you build your audience. You deserve it.

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David R.'s avatar

"is that the U.S. has never been able to marshall the political will to remake its industry along more competitive lines."

I've said this elsewhere, but in the case of China, and before it South Korea, Taiwan, and Japan, this drive for international competitiveness is often conducted using implicit or explicit transfers from workers/consumers to industry owners.

In South Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and Germany, the worst edges are filed off by democratic politics, but they still constrain labor markets to constrain wage growth, offer cheap credit and favorable tax treatment to exporters, and overinvest in logistics infrastructure to reduce costs. China today, with no such constraints from popular pressure and coming off a long period in which living standards rose rapidly enough to make up for transfers, has subsidies for industry tallying perhaps 10% of GDP, much of it aimed at export markets.

In addition to explicit subsidies, local and provincial governments offer free land, state owned banks lend at a net negative cost for capital paid for by fiscal repression aimed at the high savings rate citizenry, wage suppression is often aided by local governments, pollution regulations are lax or honored in the breach.

Using the public purse to spur innovation and disseminate best practice is a net good; using it to subsidize production just ensures that the citizenry cannot afford the fruits of their own labor and makes economies reliant on export markets to provide demand.

On net, it is a good thing that the United States has not fallen into this never-ending trap, and it would be a good thing if the surplus countries could climb out of it to at least some degree and put more money in the hands of the workers doing the manufacturing.

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