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lenerdenator | 4 days ago

Best == cheaper. Could you do it in the US? Probably. But it'd take longer and you'd have to pay more money.

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quentindanjou|4 days ago

This is not true. There is now a skill gap. There are countless examples that it isn't about being cheaper. The organisation and optimization of the workforce and infrastructure isn't something we can ignore. The choice of China isn't because it is cheaper, a lot of high-end and even luxury products are produced in China because they can ensure a high-quality manufacturing.

There are other places, as the comment above mentioned, that can produce for cheaper.

lenerdenator|4 days ago

Of course it's true.

The US could do the exact same. Many high-quality, sophisticated goods are made in the US.

It's just cheaper to do in China because the salaries are lower and the costs of establishing more efficient business infrastructure are lower.

And since these companies care more about cost than anything, they choose China.

Almondsetat|4 days ago

The US literally doesn't have the people to do this.

lenerdenator|4 days ago

Yes and no.

The US is still an economy with the ability to tackle very complex tasks with its industrial base. Up until fairly recently, it was a major destination for people seeking higher education and work in specialized fields in STEM, which is necessary for the execution of the projects that companies like Apple want to do.

The problem is that we now have an anti-immigration administration, and are home to a number of multinational companies - Apple's a great example - that feel that their one and only obligation is to create value for shareholders. They don't want to throw the money needed at American engineer salaries, because money paid to the American engineer is money not paid to a shareholder.

We can possibly deal with the administration. The US isn't the only country in the world with a nativist movement; China does it with non-Han peoples within its borders. The real hangup is making a bunch of Americans with capital feel some sort of loyalty towards their own country and its workers.

_DeadFred_|4 days ago

China didn't either, until it did. US business isn't willing to build up the workforce to do this but we definitely have the people.