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689 points taubek | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.641s | source
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Clubber ◴[] No.43631933[source]
>The second thing we see is that Asian manufacturing in Asia produces US jobs. You go to Footlocker to buy a pair of $100 shoes because you can afford them. This creates jobs for the Footlocker employees, Nike designers, marketing teams, and other US people throughout this chain.

In all fairness, most of those jobs would still exist if manufacturing was brought onshore. The fact that they were manufactured in Asia makes no difference here, except for perhaps the longshoremen that was included in "other US people."

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ravelantunes ◴[] No.43632163[source]
The author’s point is that the lower cost of goods coming from Asia results in increased demand, which then generates more jobs in the post-manufacturing part of the chain.
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xienze ◴[] No.43632322[source]
That completely discounts the strategic value of self-sufficiency. I mean, why not outsource ALL manufacturing and agriculture if someone else can do it cheaper? Surely that wouldn't come back to bite us, right?
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1. coffeebeqn ◴[] No.43632764[source]
Are cheap sneakers a strategic asset now?
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2. wegfawefgawefg ◴[] No.43632942[source]
Learning piano makes me better at music. Learning the violin is then easier.
3. xienze ◴[] No.43635385[source]
Are you intentionally being obtuse and thinking I was only talking about sneakers? Obviously I’m talking about trying to keep a wide range of vital goods manufactured within the US. Food, weapons, chip fabs, electrical components, pharmaceuticals, medical supplies, etc. are all things we should try to have robust domestic production of.