amdfangirl :
I'm hoping at some point that manufactuering returns to the developed world.
It would be nice not to create an environmental catatrophe everytime we want a new product.
If enough hipsters get behind such an initive, we might be able to make a niche.
Manufacturering or assembly in developed nations is now a feature. Look at the Moto X (Texas) and the Raspberry Pi (UK). I hope this sets a trend.
Not particularly fond of eating fish from the same sea that untreated waste is thrown into.
Fish swim where they pee and poop.
😀
Can you please tell our American leftists what the Minimum Wage is in Australia?
I'm all for manufacturing in America. We can't over price the items heavily because people want a better living doing the job though.
Cooper Tires in the US is a 3rd tier tire manufacturer, meaning they do not design their own tires. They buy designs and produce them at a much lower rate since they did not incur the costs of design and testing. The workers are paid well. A couple years ago they went on strike wanting to get paid more, upset the white collar workers weren't doing the real work. The white collar workers they referenced were the guys doing sales (making commission on the sale, etc).So the blue collar workers went on strike. One week later the strike continued to rage on and Cooper Tire had to do something. All white collar workers went out to the factory and within 24 hours were producing at 75% rate of the full production. Most of those white collar workers had been blue collar workers in the same factory and knew how to do the work.
The blue collar workers were making $18-$27/hour making tires. The white collar workers were $40k to $130k a year salary including commission. The C level people were making $175k and up.
The average house in Findlay, Ohio where Cooper Tire has one of its two plants is around $120,000. If you move outside the town, a nice house is easily found for $100,000 or under.
We in the US have an issue. It isn't how well you life. It's how much money do you make compared to someone else. You could make $50,000 a year and have a ton of money in the bank and live off 1/3rd of your income while the guy making $100k is living paycheck to paycheck. The person making $50k a year will feel they are being treated unfairly and demand more money.
That's the problem with manufacturing in America. It already pays well, it just requires you do actually do work where you might get dirty. Americans have become pretty boy pansies compared to a generation or two ago.
Americans are afraid to do work, plain and simple.