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Why Amanda Spielman Deserves her Peerage – politicalbetting.com

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  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,722
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    The US presumably wants rules that don’t allow for labels saying “Contains chlorinated chicken”.
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    Eabhal said:

    It's funny how BigG was celebrating an easing of Net Zero on the last thread even as he enjoys the bounty of plentiful green energy. We're down at only 2GW gas at the moment on a relatively still day, thanks to 3GW from our closest ally France and 7GW from solar.
    Beyond a certain point gas gets very difficult to eliminate though - I mean it still isn't eliminated even when we have a negative price for electricity. I just don't se how we get to net zero - net quite low, sure. But Zero seems economically mad to me. And yes I have panels myself
  • PulpstarPulpstar Posts: 79,235
    MattW said:

    Lee Anderson's been on that one, citing lettuce.

    I'm not sure if he's checked how many people don't want US needs-to-be-chlorine-washed chicken (off the top of my head: 80-90%) here, and what this does for his attempted populism.

    We'll see how the "patriots" react, and what happens to the different factions of his voting coalition.
    If 80-90% don't want it I'd have thought it wouldn't sell ?
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    edited April 6

    Vat is counted as a tariff by MAGAs because with domestically produced goods you can claim back the VAT on the whole production chain, whereas on imports the foreign producers can't claim it back on their costs. Or something like that.
    That's because the domestic producers are using components on which VAT has been levied asked and can discount the already paid tax.The total tax should come to the same thing. If the US doesn't zero rate export goods that's its problem.


  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529

    The US presumably wants rules that don’t allow for labels saying “Contains chlorinated chicken”.
    If it gives the country of origin then that will be assumed.

    In any case food is more expensive in the USA - how much US produce could be sold here even if it was the same standard ?
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,227


    Orwell’s 6 Rules

    From “Politics and the English Language”

    Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
    Never use a long word where a short one will do.
    If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
    Never use the passive where you can use the active.
    Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
    Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.

    5 is a bit nationalist (a facet of his character to which Orwell seemed entirely oblivious).
    His Note On Nationalism are still one of the best dissections of that topic.

    What 5 refers to, I think, is the scattering of French and Latin as an attempt to intellectualise. See the mention of jargon and scientific words as well.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765
    nico67 said:

    So we should also send back any Israeli politician from Netanyahu’s party as they are genocide supporters .
    Aren't we obliged by our ICC membership to detain a few of them ?
    That certainly applies to Netanyahu.
  • CyclefreeCyclefree Posts: 25,651

    I don't think you have any where near exclusive rights to that claim. Many on here have been making it for years. Just as I have been writing headers for years about the root causes of Brexit and Trump but certainly don't claim any exclusive rights to those ideas and would not even think of complaining if others make similar points in their own headers.

    I see it rather as reassurance that my views are valid and that others agree with them - often rather more articulately than my efforts.
    Not claiming exclusivity. Just a hat tip. Not least because this header is so similar to one I wrote about Welby last November in its sardonic "this is not the system failing but the system working as it's meant to" tone.

    Anyway it and @ydoethur's were fun to read. So have a nice day all.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,227
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    It would end up in processed foods, takeaways etc. In about 24 hours after sale being legalised.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,463


    Orwell’s 6 Rules

    From “Politics and the English Language”

    Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
    Never use a long word where a short one will do.
    If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
    Never use the passive where you can use the active.
    Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
    Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.

    5 is a bit nationalist (a facet of his character to which Orwell seemed entirely oblivious).
    No renouned English language writer including Orwell and the bard himeslf would get past rule 1. He must have penned them in a bad mood
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,854
    FF43 said:

    That's because the domestic producers are using components on which VAT has been levied asked and can discount the already paid tax.The total tax should come to the same thing. If the US doesn't zero rate export goods that's its problem.
    It's not the export goods that are the issue but the inputs. Most US businesses aren't exempt from paying sales tax on their inputs.
  • BarnesianBarnesian Posts: 9,079
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    As long as it is clearly labelled.
    "US chicken washed in bleach to remove the crusty bacteria".
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,722
    Pulpstar said:

    If 80-90% don't want it I'd have thought it wouldn't sell ?
    You won’t be allowed to know it’s there.
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,556
    PB Londeners: is this a thing? Buy tickets for a car boot????



    ‪Marie Le Conte‬ ‪@youngvulgarian.marieleconte.com‬
    ·
    27m
    good morning I have the complaint of a one thousand year old woman

    why have carboot sales in London become so trendy that you now have to buy tickets online in advance and/or queue for 45 minutes to get in

    I just want to idly look at things for half an hour in a car park

    leave me alone

    https://bsky.app/profile/youngvulgarian.marieleconte.com/post/3lm55bvfgfs2q
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,240

    I don't even think that was the plan. I think the plan has always been that the main beneficieries of globalisation were the multinational companies. Indeed I think the whole point of globalisation as far as its original architects and instigators were concerned was exactly the opposite of what Vance claims. They saw that the best way to massively increase their markets was to drag Middle Income and Third world countries up to the level of the First world. This is certanly what has been happening with China. No bad thing in itself but it also required a considerable amount of dragging down of First World countries - or at least of the living standards of their citizens. Which again is exactly what has happened.

    If Vance didn't know that was the inevitable result of Globalisation then he is even dumber than he looks.
    Did globalisation have "architects and instigators"? It seems to me more a nearly inevitable consequence of improving technologies in communication, shipping, and so on -- which makes it possible to do things like building products in complex cross border supply chains and have it be cheaper to do so than to do it all in one place. Once it's cheaper to do something in way X than way Y, way X becomes very hard to stop from taking over -- you can try to put the brakes on it by adding costs and barriers, but people who want to make money are always going to be trying to erode those one way or another.

    I think the rise in living standards in places like China is a side effect, not an intentional goal.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765
    .
    Roger said:

    No renouned English language writer including Orwell and the bard himeslf would get past rule 1. He must have penned them in a bad mood
    As with all language rules, they're not really rules.
  • JohnLilburneJohnLilburne Posts: 6,609
    FF43 said:

    That's because the domestic producers are using components on which VAT has been levied asked and can discount the already paid tax.The total tax should come to the same thing. If the US doesn't zero rate export goods that's its problem.


    I think the issue is that US states use old fashioned sales taxes, whereas the rest of the world seems to have moved onto VAT
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    edited April 6

    It's not the export goods that are the issue but the inputs. Most US businesses aren't exempt from paying sales tax on their inputs.
    I don't think this is the generally the case. Sales tax normally only applies to the final consumer. Products that will be resold are exempt. Sales taxes are levied by states and it is up to each state how they apply it. It is isn't in their interest to discourage businesses exporting to the rest of the USA as well as abroad from investing in their state.
  • Big_G_NorthWalesBig_G_NorthWales Posts: 65,030

    Surely any country is able to refuse entry to any foreign citizen, for whatever reason.
    Badenoch said she did not know the 2 Labour mps involved as they were elected last July but affirmed any country's right to refuse entry to any foreign citizen

    Not sure what the problem is with her view
  • rottenboroughrottenborough Posts: 65,556
    This is useful for any PBers who want to get up to speed with world trade flows on a sunny sunday morning:

    https://www.mckinsey.com/mgi/our-research/global-trade-explorer-what-are-the-most-important-trade-corridors?sector=02m&eco=usa&year=2023&eco2=chn&toggle=i&sub-sector=T2M


    US imported $610billion of electronics in 2023. Mostly China, Taiwan, S Korea.

  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,240
    kle4 said:

    I think that makes sense to a degree. In a sense we had that with most hereditary lords no longer sat in the house of peers.

    Its also why whilst honours should not (but totally are) bought and sold, selling peerages is much more troublesome given the implicit power a peer has, albeit in a relatively limited way per individual.
    As a Lib Dem I think we should publish a price list for honours. That way it's all clear and fair and above board, as well as a nice little earner for the government. (I do stop short of favouring having the proceeds going to party coffers :-))
  • glwglw Posts: 10,367
    edited April 6

    It's not the export goods that are the issue but the inputs. Most US businesses aren't exempt from paying sales tax on their inputs.

    Whatever it is it is a US problem, either at a federal or state level they could fix the problem. The US position seems to equate to "you must trade and tax exactly the same way we do, or else." That is completely nuts.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529

    You won’t be allowed to know it’s there.
    Of course you will.

    British chicken has union flags on the packaging and would be cheaper.

    So who is going to buy chicken which is lower quality, more expensive and imported ?
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765
    This is the plan ?

    Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer says Trump wants to onshore garment factories from Vietnam and Cambodia to the United States
    https://x.com/atrupar/status/1908240308845879423
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,854
    glw said:

    Whatever it is it is a US problem, either at a federal or state level they could fix the problem. The US position seems to equate to "you must trade and tax exactly the same way we do, or else." That is completely nuts.
    That's the European position: if you have distortions caused by not having a VAT system then just adopt VAT.
  • Richard_TyndallRichard_Tyndall Posts: 33,255
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    The issue is that there are many circumstances where you may not know if it is chlorinated chicken or not. Restaurants and bars, ready meals, takeaway food, workplace canteens. Unless there is a legal requirement to clearly label such food - something that would almost certainly run foul of non tarrif barrier rules - then it would be extremely difficult to avoid.
  • AnneJGPAnneJGP Posts: 3,427

    It would end up in processed foods, takeaways etc. In about 24 hours after sale being legalised.
    Maybe, but how would it be cheaper than the cheapest chicken already available? I've understood that food prices in the US are already higher than here, then add the cost of shipping.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    Nigelb said:

    This is the plan ?

    Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer says Trump wants to onshore garment factories from Vietnam and Cambodia to the United States
    https://x.com/atrupar/status/1908240308845879423

    I wonder if those people who want the low value added manufacturing are willing to become the low paid workers required.

    Perhaps a Labor secretary might more sensibly suggest that the US workforce is upskilled so that they can do high value manufacturing for high pay.
  • FF43FF43 Posts: 17,884
    edited April 6

    That's the European position: if you have distortions caused by not having a VAT system then just adopt VAT.
    Actually that isn't the European position. VAT gets zero rated when goods are exported from the EU and the UK as well.

    Every country can do what it wants in its own interest. If America thinks it's worth trashing its international trade with big impacts on its economy no-one can stop it.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765

    That's the European position: if you have distortions caused by not having a VAT system then just adopt VAT.
    The EU isn't trying to change the US tax system through the introduction of tariffs, so no, it isn't.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765
    Leon said:

    Yes, those evil Cambodians with their gdp per capita of about 3 cents a year, stealing the opportunities of Americans on $80,000 a year, who want to work in factories 14 hours a day, sewing hoodies together

    God help us
    All the MAGAts are saying, but robots.
    Which is stupid in just about every way.
  • GallowgateGallowgate Posts: 20,177
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    That’s fine as long as no trade deal requires the removal of origin labelling (I would prefer to extend this to restaurants too).
  • williamglennwilliamglenn Posts: 54,854
    Nigelb said:

    The EU isn't trying to change the US tax system through the introduction of tariffs, so no, it isn't.
    I don’t think they’re trying to change the European tax system. They’re using the argument for domestic consumption to justify the tariffs.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838

    I don't think you have any where near exclusive rights to that claim. Many on here have been making it for years. Just as I have been writing headers for years about the root causes of Brexit and Trump but certainly don't claim any exclusive rights to those ideas and would not even think of complaining if others make similar points in their own headers.

    I see it rather as reassurance that my views are valid and that others agree with them - often rather more articulately than my efforts.
    The point has indeed been made frequently and Cyclefree makes it powerfully.

    However, I would find it even more interesting if, having identified the issue, someone could offer a theory on how this might be changed, perhaps by a new Government with a parliamentary majority.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,463

    I don't think you have any where near exclusive rights to that claim. Many on here have been making it for years. Just as I have been writing headers for years about the root causes of Brexit and Trump but certainly don't claim any exclusive rights to those ideas and would not even think of complaining if others make similar points in their own headers.

    I see it rather as reassurance that my views are valid and that others agree with them - often rather more articulately than my efforts.
    Satire is as old as the hills. This morning's header was a good effort I thought in contrast to the Leon pastiche which was rather obvious and childish.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Leon said:

    Yes, those evil Cambodians with their gdp per capita of about 3 cents a year, stealing the opportunities of Americans on $80,000 a year, who want to work in factories 14 hours a day, sewing hoodies together

    God help us
    Why are you so shocked by this - of course this is an aim of tariffs.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948
    Nigelb said:

    The EU isn't trying to change the US tax system through the introduction of tariffs, so no, it isn't.
    Good morning from a dark extremely early CDMX. Dan Neidle’s article on this topic is a fascinating read and well worth it - goes way beyond the current MAGA misapprehensions. I learned quite a lot and I’m supposed to be a tax policy expert.

    https://taxpolicy.org.uk/2025/04/02/no-vat-isnt-a-tariff-but-the-us-would-benefit-from-adopting-it/
  • isamisam Posts: 41,335
    "The best place to watch the drama of Britain’s fastest changing postcode is next to Rainham’s 12th-century Norman church. At quarter past six, a tube-carriage haul of glum commuters is dumped at the station, where Essex meets the London sprawl. The final slog home is a curious walk of shame: past the gated Georgian pomp of Rainham Hall, and a sign for the Prawn Hub takeaway, mocked up in glaringly familiar colours. Barrack rows of new builds await them, following the pylons out to the desolate Rainham Marsh, where once upon a time, the Britain of the Nineties dreamt of building its own Disneyland.

    What’s it like living here? I ask two men skulking off to the pub through the graveyard, past a pair of Lithuanian builders drinking cans. “It used to feel like a lovely English village,” says one. “Now it’s a fucking shithole and I can’t wait to get out.”"

    https://unherd.com/2025/04/reform-is-coming-for-dagenham/
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,823
    Roger said:



    Satire is as old as the hills. This morning's header was a good effort I thought in contrast to the Leon pastiche which was rather obvious and childish.
    You are making yourself look extremely foolish, but you're probably used to that
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948
    On my way for a dawn balloon flight over the Teotihuacan pyramids.

    Getting up at 3.45 isn’t so bad when your body clock’s still on UK time.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,576
    glw said:

    Which is fair and a lot more sensible than the US position which is: the distortions caused by having VAT means you most stop applying VAT to US goods.

    Do you not see how absolutely ridiculous it is for the US to expect THE ENTIRE BLOODY WORLD to do exactly what the US wants in their own countries?

    I honestly hope we don't get a trade deal with the US, we need to trade less with them not more, that US has gone stark raving mad.
    Especially as (IIRC) in the US one sees prices advertised as (for example) $2.99, and it turns out to be $2.99 plus two or three lots of taxes, making the goods more like $4.50 or so.
  • LeonLeon Posts: 59,823
    edited April 6

    Why are you so shocked by this - of course this is an aim of tariffs.
    Because it is stupid. Americans don't and won't work in factories for Cambodian wages. So presumably these are going to be robotised factories. Which doesn't mean more jobs for Americans just fewer jobs for Cambodians

    If Trump wants to "level the playing field" and make America wealthy again he should look at massive American corporations - eg Apple - that book all their profits in Ireland or Amsterdam or the Kerguelen Islands - and thereby pay almost nothing - and force them to reshore that cash

    That would be justified and also economically sensible, and good for America (even if it fucks Ireland, but hey ho)
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948

    Why are you so shocked by this - of course this is an aim of tariffs.
    I think what feels quite a jolt is the reality of America First. There is no noblesse oblige.

    We’ve had decades of global trading rules where preferential tariffs for poor countries have been the norm, and often unilateral. Not least because they combine doing good with rich country consumer self interest.

    MAGA makes no distinction between rich high wage and poor low wage economies.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Leon said:

    Because it is stupid
    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819
    isam said:

    "The best place to watch the drama of Britain’s fastest changing postcode is next to Rainham’s 12th-century Norman church. At quarter past six, a tube-carriage haul of glum commuters is dumped at the station, where Essex meets the London sprawl. The final slog home is a curious walk of shame: past the gated Georgian pomp of Rainham Hall, and a sign for the Prawn Hub takeaway, mocked up in glaringly familiar colours. Barrack rows of new builds await them, following the pylons out to the desolate Rainham Marsh, where once upon a time, the Britain of the Nineties dreamt of building its own Disneyland.

    What’s it like living here? I ask two men skulking off to the pub through the graveyard, past a pair of Lithuanian builders drinking cans. “It used to feel like a lovely English village,” says one. “Now it’s a fucking shithole and I can’t wait to get out.”"

    https://unherd.com/2025/04/reform-is-coming-for-dagenham/

    Such a shame, Dagenham was always one of the most tranquil and picturesque areas of outer London.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,227
    Cyclefree said:

    Not claiming exclusivity. Just a hat tip. Not least because this header is so similar to one I wrote about Welby last November in its sardonic "this is not the system failing but the system working as it's meant to" tone.

    Anyway it and @ydoethur's were fun to read. So have a nice day all.
    #NU10K
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529

    Especially as (IIRC) in the US one sees prices advertised as (for example) $2.99, and it turns out to be $2.99 plus two or three lots of taxes, making the goods more like $4.50 or so.
    With the customer expected to add a 15% tip.
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765
    TimS said:

    Good morning from a dark extremely early CDMX. Dan Neidle’s article on this topic is a fascinating read and well worth it - goes way beyond the current MAGA misapprehensions. I learned quite a lot and I’m supposed to be a tax policy expert.

    https://taxpolicy.org.uk/2025/04/02/no-vat-isnt-a-tariff-but-the-us-would-benefit-from-adopting-it/
    That's very good.
    Interesting that he makes the same point I did - that Trump introducing VAT would have been a smarter policy.

    Is it actually possible under the federal system, though ?
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    TimS said:

    I think what feels quite a jolt is the reality of America First. There is no noblesse oblige.

    We’ve had decades of global trading rules where preferential tariffs for poor countries have been the norm, and often unilateral. Not least because they combine doing good with rich country consumer self interest.

    MAGA makes no distinction between rich high wage and poor low wage economies.
    Somewhat of a rose-tinted view of globalised trade.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948
    Taking of rich and poor countries it’s interesting gauging where Mexico sits on that spectrum from early impressions (though capital cities are never wholly representative).

    Here’s the checklist

    - can you drink the tap water: maybe
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: yes
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes

    Overall giving very middle income vibes. Around Turkey level, below Greece but above Morocco.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012


    Orwell’s 6 Rules

    From “Politics and the English Language”

    Never use a metaphor, simile, or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.
    Never use a long word where a short one will do.
    If it is possible to cut a word out, always cut it out.
    Never use the passive where you can use the active.
    Never use a foreign phrase, a scientific word, or a jargon word if you can think of an everyday English equivalent.
    Break any of these rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous.

    5 is a bit nationalist (a facet of his character to which Orwell seemed entirely oblivious).
    Mutatis mutandis this pretty much cuts the mustard, or fits the bill, in ameliorating the worst effects or outcomes of the ghastly things which are written by so many.
  • OldKingColeOldKingCole Posts: 34,576

    With the customer expected to add a 15% tip.
    In a shop? Really?
    In an earlier life I ran community pharmacies, one of them with quite a big cosmetic section and no-one tipped my staff.
    Actually, there was one occasion. We'd got in a line of cheap wigs to go with the hair colours and so on, and one lady wanted hers 'dressed'; she'd some sort of problem IIRC. One of our female staff had worked in a hairdressers, so did the job, and the customer tipped her. Twenty five years, god knows how many transactions, and that was the only time I saw a tip.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948

    Somewhat of a rose-tinted view of globalised trade.
    Not at all, it’s been the established norm.

    https://policy.trade.ec.europa.eu/consultations/preferential-tariff-scheme-between-eu-and-developing-countries_en

    Something we made pains to retain post Brexit.

    As I said, it’s both good and completely economically logical for a consumer market that wants cheap food and clothing.
  • isamisam Posts: 41,335
    edited April 6
    Has anyone here heard of or read anything by Charles Amos? Quite a bizarre character who I first saw on tv defending cousins having children together. I think he has an interesting view on life

    Substack is full of dating advice; rarely, though, is there advice to lonely people on getting more company. I present the market fundamentalist solution: Lonely people should buy company with dinner and drinks.

    https://x.com/mrcharlesamos/status/1908817685770907823?s=46&t=CW4pLmMpTqsJXCdjW0Z6Q

    Advice to Lonely People: Buy Company
    Just friends but not like before


    https://t.co/lgOA9rdX2E
  • NigelbNigelb Posts: 76,765

    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
    It is very stupid.
    Clothing - and especially cheap clothing - is a minuscule part of the US economy. There is zero competitive advantage in the US pursuing this.

    Against that, even if you set aside the possible serious damage to the economies of some of the world's poorer countries, it makes a significant part of Trump's base poorer.

    And the likelihood of any increase in US apparel manufacturing over the rest of Trump's term - also close to zero.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Leon said:

    Because it is stupid. Americans don't and won't work in factories for Cambodian wages. So presumably these are going to be robotised factories. Which doesn't mean more jobs for Americans just fewer jobs for Cambodians

    If Trump wants to "level the playing field" and make America wealthy again he should look at massive American corporations - eg Apple - that book all their profits in Ireland or Amsterdam or the Kerguelen Islands - and thereby pay almost nothing - and force them to reshore that cash

    That would be justified and also economically sensible, and good for America (even if it fucks Ireland, but hey ho)
    America has already been on a worldwide mission to raise CT in countries beholden to it (in an effort to reshore profits) - Ireland got the soft treatment for what appear to be special reasons, but the thumbscrews were definitely used on the UK - look at what happened to Truss's plan to cancel the CT rise.

    Perhaps Trump genuinely wants to have Americans making things. I wish someone would come in with the same ambitions for the UK.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    TimS said:

    Taking of rich and poor countries it’s interesting gauging where Mexico sits on that spectrum from early impressions (though capital cities are never wholly representative).

    Here’s the checklist

    - can you drink the tap water: maybe
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: yes
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes

    Overall giving very middle income vibes. Around Turkey level, below Greece but above Morocco.

    How about 'lots of obesity' as a good sign of middle income level ?

    That would likely work in western countries as well - the poorer districts (ie closer to world middle income areas) having more obesity than the more affluent districts.

    And ditto, but in reverse, for the poorest countries.
  • Sean_FSean_F Posts: 38,518

    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
    It’s harder to see what the advantage is in on-shoring cheap textile production.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411
    TimS said:

    Taking of rich and poor countries it’s interesting gauging where Mexico sits on that spectrum from early impressions (though capital cities are never wholly representative).

    Here’s the checklist

    - can you drink the tap water: maybe
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: yes
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes

    Overall giving very middle income vibes. Around Turkey level, below Greece but above Morocco.

    A few small changes:

    - can you drink the tap water: no
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: not really, the vast majority of the people crossing the border to the US these days are from countries other than Mexico
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes
    - overarmed police riding round in Jeeps with mounted machine guns: yes
    - pharmacies that will sell absolutely anything, no prescription required: yes
  • stodgestodge Posts: 14,484

    Were you happy with the situation 1945-90 (or thereabouts) in Eastern Europe?
    Inasmuch as the division of Europe between the Cold War Superpowers kept the peace for 45 years and when the Warsaw Pact collapsed the resulting transformation was remarkably peaceful, yes.

    It wasn't ideal for Eastern Europe, granted, but had a full scale confrontation between the superpowers occurred in Europe, it wouldn't have been ideal for anyone. The Iron Curtain and the Berlin Wall divided Europe but it also maintained the peace.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838
    Sean_F said:

    It’s harder to see what the advantage is in on-shoring cheap textile production.
    Nike trainers aren't particularly cheap afaicr.
  • TresTres Posts: 2,819
    Cookie said:

    *Sigh*
    Look, Roger, I like you. I suspect I'd like you if I met you in real life. I value your place on this board. Please bear all this mind when I say this:I fear you haven't learned anything at all about your fellow countrymen in the past 8 years. You can't simply say everyone you disagree with are idiots. No doubt some leavers are idiots, but that is equally true of some remainers. You just need to remember that some voters have different priorities or make different assessments than you do.

    Trump is not Brexit, and the issues are very different but what they have in common is a blank incomprehension on the part of one set of voters about the other. We'd do well to try to bridge that gap. I don't believe all Trump voters are idiots. The article I linked to earlier is, I think, a good start.
    quite, some of them are deplorable
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280
    Sean_F said:

    It’s harder to see what the advantage is in on-shoring cheap textile production.
    In the world Trump is selling the textile jobs are paying $60k for those who feel left behind.

    In the world Trump delivers the textile jobs are done by illegal immigrants for below minimum wage with employers able to exploit them with threats of deportation to them and their family.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited April 6

    With the customer expected to add a 15% tip.
    15%....more like 20-25% these days if you don't want the death stare and the inplied threat of we will never serve you ever again. And that's just from the self service check out machines.
  • MalmesburyMalmesbury Posts: 54,227

    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
    As mentioned yesterday

    https://www.gq.com/story/american-giant-made-in-usa-t-shirt-interview

    You can’t price compete with the low cost countries for T-shirts or other cheap items.

    All a tariff wall will do is put the price of t-shirts up massively. Which will screw poor consumers in the US.

    Do you spend £25 on your t-shirts? - there are one available that are made in the U.K. at that price. Cloth woven here etc.
  • Luckyguy1983Luckyguy1983 Posts: 30,838

    As mentioned yesterday

    https://www.gq.com/story/american-giant-made-in-usa-t-shirt-interview

    You can’t price compete with the low cost countries for T-shirts or other cheap items.

    All a tariff wall will do is put the price of t-shirts up massively. Which will screw poor consumers in the US.

    Do you spend £25 on your t-shirts? - there are one available that are made in the U.K. at that price. Cloth woven here etc.
    Paywalled I'm afraid. I'm lucky to have some favourite clothing items made in the UK, but they are not the norm in my wardrobe.
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,463
    edited April 6
    TimS said:

    Taking of rich and poor countries it’s interesting gauging where Mexico sits on that spectrum from early impressions (though capital cities are never wholly representative).

    Here’s the checklist

    - can you drink the tap water: maybe
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: yes
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes

    Overall giving very middle income vibes. Around Turkey level, below Greece but above Morocco.

    Have you come across the sword fire swallowers who are scattered around road junctions? Apparantly their life expectancy is mid thirties. Though one of my favourite capitals it has extremely poor and extremely rich living in very close proximity which makes it third world. You'll see armed guards outside the haciendas and peope living on pavements opposite. Having said that their use of colour is spectacular and the zoo if it's still there is wonderful. Are the VW's still everywhere?

    PS. If you get the chance the bull fights using horses are spectacular.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411

    Nike trainers aren't particularly cheap afaicr.
    As Flight of the Conchords noted
    "They're turning kids into slaves just to make cheaper sneakers.
    But what's the real cost?
    'Cause the sneakers don't seem that much cheaper.
    Why are we still paying so much for sneakers
    When you got them made by little slave kids"

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TLEK0UZH4cs
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948

    America has already been on a worldwide mission to raise CT in countries beholden to it (in an effort to reshore profits) - Ireland got the soft treatment for what appear to be special reasons, but the thumbscrews were definitely used on the UK - look at what happened to Truss's plan to cancel the CT rise.

    Perhaps Trump genuinely wants to have Americans making things. I wish someone would come in with the same ambitions for the UK.
    US policy on CT has been very contradictory. They were initially at the forefront of Pillar 2 and now declare they hate it, having discovered that the panoply of US tax credits and incentives brings it into scope as one of those sub-15% countries it had been deriding.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited April 6
    I don't believe even Trump believes that the realistic outcome will onshore low value garmant making. One big thing he has done (that isn't getting much attention), scrapping the de minimis. That is huge for the likes of Shein but also how is US customs going to deal with it in theory every package is subject to tariffs however low value.

    Somebody i know who runs a number of e-commerce stores in the US is very concerned because as a US citizen they will be on the hook for everything and of they break the rules easy for them to be fined, delisted from Amazon etc. But says even before this loads of dodgy Chinese outifts would hide behind shell companies and its whack a mole and with no US presence impossible to stop them breaking the law / rules.
  • algarkirkalgarkirk Posts: 14,012

    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
    There is a problem, which I am sure Trump won't solve well, with the modern world's extreme version of applying Adam Smith/David Ricardo to much though not all of job activity.

    Neither Smith nor Ricardo - two great architects of the moden interdependent global systems and trade - would have envisaged the extent to which their ideas are true when applied with modern technology.

    It is intellectually feasible to imagine entire nations who have outsourced almost all trad working class bloke activity to abroad and to AI/robotics.

    But this fails to deal with the nature of the bloke, left stranded by the system. This is not sustainable, and needs a new Smith/Ricardo to formulate and theorise.
  • MattWMattW Posts: 26,670

    It may or may not work, but it isn't especially stupid. The US is not the UK. The relatively low cost of energy and the relative flexibility of the labour market means its not beyond the bounds of possibility that textile manufacturing could be on-shored to some degree.
    That asks the question as to why they left in the first place.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948
    rcs1000 said:

    A few small changes:

    - can you drink the tap water: no
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: not really, the vast majority of the people crossing the border to the US these days are from countries other than Mexico
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes
    - overarmed police riding round in Jeeps with mounted machine guns: yes
    - pharmacies that will sell absolutely anything, no prescription required: yes
    That’s illegal crossings, the equivalent of our small boats. Still plenty of Mexicans overstaying visas but arriving legally. It remains a source (and a destination). Like Turkey.
  • TimSTimS Posts: 14,948
    Roger said:

    Have you come across the sword fire swallowers who are scattered around road junctions? Apparantly their life expectancy is mid thirties. Though one of my favourite capitals it has extremely poor and extremely rich living in very close proximity which makes it third world. You'll see armed guards outside the haciendas and peope living on pavements opposite. Having said that their use of colour is spectacular and the zoo if it's still there is wonderful. Are the VW's still everywhere?

    PS. If you get the chance the bull fights using horses are spectacular.
    All the cars seem to be Japanese hybrids.
  • glwglw Posts: 10,367

    I don't believe even Trump believes that the realistic outcome will onshore low value garmant making. One big thing he has done (that isn't getting much attention), scrapping the de minimis. That is huge for the likes of Shein but also how is US customs going to deal with it in theory every package is subject to tariffs however low value.

    Presumably things are going to get clogged up rather quickly.
  • bondegezoubondegezou Posts: 13,722

    Of course you will.

    British chicken has union flags on the packaging and would be cheaper.

    So who is going to buy chicken which is lower quality, more expensive and imported ?
    The US in negotiations has explicitly criticised what they call “unjustified” labelling: https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/why-labels-wont-protect-uk-food-standards-from-a-us-trade-deal-ahUlA9H2YOWw
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,463
    edited April 6
    TimS said:

    Taking of rich and poor countries it’s interesting gauging where Mexico sits on that spectrum from early impressions (though capital cities are never wholly representative).

    Here’s the checklist

    - can you drink the tap water: maybe
    - Taxi touts at airport arrivals: a few, but fairly orderly
    - Risk of travellers diarrhoea: yes
    - Shanty towns: no
    - city air smells of unfiltered vehicle fumes: no
    - homeless children: no
    - source of undocumented migrants: yes
    - average age of cars over 10 years: marginal
    - taxis only take cash: no
    - Cash is crumpled and dog-eared: tba
    - random dangerous looking cables slung between houses: yes

    Overall giving very middle income vibes. Around Turkey level, below Greece but above Morocco.

    I'm surprised about city air. When I was there everyone except the local crew and me (I was a heavy smoker) got ill with the fumes.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited April 6
    glw said:

    Presumably things are going to get clogged up rather quickly.
    They couldn't keep up before when they could ignore low value itema so it could well descend into total chaos.

    It is a loophole that the Chinese exploit but it seems Trump solution (as so often) doesn't really consider things properly
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,205
    kle4 said:

    Not really related but a reply on that thread about people expecting too much evidence due to tv (the csi effect) and a common follow up.

    also the idea that circumstance evidence = weak evidence. No! A strong chain of circumstantial evidence is about as strong as you can get for e.g. murder short of discovering the perpetrator either in the act or in the possession of a collection of trophies and a detailed diary.
    On juries, we have the specific problem that academic research into how our juries reach their decisions is effectively illegal. What is said in the jury room stays in the jury room, by law.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited April 6
    rcs1000 said:

    On the subject of bringing industries back on shore, tariffs are a very inefficient way of doing it.

    Why?

    Because how can you, as a business owner be sure that the tariff policy will continue? If you build a factory to make MAGA hats, and then the tariffs come down, then you are really stuffed, because you've spent all this money on a factory and it can't compete.

    Which is why most industrial support in countries like China is via subsidised finance. You want to build a $100m factory, well the government will set you up with one of the State supported banks, who'll lend you $95m for 20 years at 3%.

    That funding - which is what the Germans did in East Germany too - is much more effective at stimulating a domestic manufacturing industry because your loan is set in stone for the next 20 years. It's not like a tariff which might get pulled if the President cuts a deal with the Vietnamese government, or if a new administration gets in with different priorities.

    Even if the tariffs are here to stay (and i don't believe they are). Trump v1 whacked big tariffs on washing machines and factories were opened in the US to make them, but per job created it was incredibly expensive way of getting a few 1000 jobs back on shore. I can't remember the exact numbers but it was many $100ks per job.

    That's not the same as thinking we need to secure ship building or eneegy production. Washing machines are here nor there.
  • MJWMJW Posts: 2,012

    Badenoch said she did not know the 2 Labour mps involved as they were elected last July but affirmed any country's right to refuse entry to any foreign citizen

    Not sure what the problem is with her view
    The issue is they were members of a parliamentary delegation, which are fairly essential to maintaining understanding and diplomatic relations between those with whom we want to maintain strong relations with. Especially when matters are so fraught - as we need MPs to be as well-informed as possible.

    They should only really be refused with very good reason - for example, say, Galloway when was an MP, given his involvement with those who make no secret of their intention to kill Israelis.

    Yang and Mohamed don't appear to have taken any stances beyond fairly common concerns about the humanitarian situation and the standard calls for a ceasefire. Neither as far as I can tell are even members of the Labour Friends of Palestine Group.

    Worth noting too that the Israeli Immigration Ministry is controlled by Smotrich's far right party so is not exactly a rational actor in the same way, say even Likud usually is (whatever you think of it).

    It is pretty stupid and self-defeating for Israel. Turning away MPs who though maybe critical of Israeli policies are hardly the ranters and ravers, is only likely to make other MPs less sympathetic to listening to the Israeli point of view.
  • another_richardanother_richard Posts: 27,529
    edited April 6

    The US in negotiations has explicitly criticised what they call “unjustified” labelling: https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/why-labels-wont-protect-uk-food-standards-from-a-us-trade-deal-ahUlA9H2YOWw
    They can criticize what they want but the UK government isn't going to make it illegal for UK supermarkets to put union flags or the world 'British' on UK produce.

    Nor does that deal with the fundamental fact that US food tends to cost more.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,205
    Agency for promoting Britain abroad sees budget slashed by 40 per cent with immediate effect... while being urged to find 50 million foreign visitors by 2030
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14575873/Agency-promoting-Britain-abroad-sees-budget-slashed-40-cent-immediate-effect-urged-50-million-foreign-visitors-2030.html

    Elon must be moonlighting in Downing Street given this contradictory and self-harming cut. Who will pay for foreign Leons to photograph beer next to empty plates?
  • RogerRoger Posts: 20,463
    TimS said:

    All the cars seem to be Japanese hybrids.
    Taxis with the passenger seat missing. It was 20 years ago
  • pm215pm215 Posts: 1,240
    algarkirk said:

    There is a problem, which I am sure Trump won't solve well, with the modern world's extreme version of applying Adam Smith/David Ricardo to much though not all of job activity.

    Neither Smith nor Ricardo - two great architects of the moden interdependent global systems and trade - would have envisaged the extent to which their ideas are true when applied with modern technology.

    It is intellectually feasible to imagine entire nations who have outsourced almost all trad working class bloke activity to abroad and to AI/robotics.

    But this fails to deal with the nature of the bloke, left stranded by the system. This is not sustainable, and needs a new Smith/Ricardo to formulate and theorise.
    Before leaving to go on holiday I got partway through Brad DeLong's book that's an economic history of the 20th century. One of his central themes is the interplay between the two ideas "capitalist market forces are massive engines of prosperity if you let them go" and "people insist that they have rights beyond what the market assesses their worth to be". The need to do something for those left stranded by the system isn't new but the answers probably won't come from the theorists on the "engines of prosperity" side of the debate; the welfare state was the 20th century attempt at an answer.
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526

    Agency for promoting Britain abroad sees budget slashed by 40 per cent with immediate effect... while being urged to find 50 million foreign visitors by 2030
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14575873/Agency-promoting-Britain-abroad-sees-budget-slashed-40-cent-immediate-effect-urged-50-million-foreign-visitors-2030.html

    Elon must be moonlighting in Downing Street given this contradictory and self-harming cut. Who will pay for foreign Leons to photograph beer next to empty plates?

    So many of the decisions by this government are very odd if your stated objective is growth, growth, growth.
  • noneoftheabovenoneoftheabove Posts: 24,280

    Agency for promoting Britain abroad sees budget slashed by 40 per cent with immediate effect... while being urged to find 50 million foreign visitors by 2030
    https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14575873/Agency-promoting-Britain-abroad-sees-budget-slashed-40-cent-immediate-effect-urged-50-million-foreign-visitors-2030.html

    Elon must be moonlighting in Downing Street given this contradictory and self-harming cut. Who will pay for foreign Leons to photograph beer next to empty plates?

    50m? Easy, just offer asylum to Americans who want to live in a sane country.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,205
    Taz said:

    People don’t have to buy chlorinated chicken though. I don’t see the issue. Give the consumer resistance I cannot see it being sold here in numbers to make it worthwhile even if it was allowed.
    Consumer resistance might stop chlorinated chicken being sold directly to supermarket customers but in practice it would be sold to food processing companies instead, and the customer would have no idea what is in their meat pie, kebab or kyev kyiv.
  • rcs1000rcs1000 Posts: 59,411

    The US in negotiations has explicitly criticised what they call “unjustified” labelling: https://www.which.co.uk/news/article/why-labels-wont-protect-uk-food-standards-from-a-us-trade-deal-ahUlA9H2YOWw
    The US has repeatedly used the NAFTA courts to strike down Canadian laws regarding food labelling - i.e. getting rid of a law that required GM foods to be labeled as such.
  • eekeek Posts: 29,739
    Nigelb said:

    That makes it a non tariff trade barrier - which it certainly is. But it's not anywhere near close to the headline VAT percentage (and will vary considerably between industries) - and a retaliatory tariff is an incoherent and self-harming response to it anyway.
    It’s not a trade barrier - VAT is simply a sales tax collected via a method that makes it hard to avoid so maximises the percentage of tax successfully collected
  • FrancisUrquhartFrancisUrquhart Posts: 83,526
    edited April 6

    They can criticize what they want but the UK government isn't going to make it illegal for UK supermarkets to put union flags or the world 'British' on UK produce.

    Nor does that deal with the fundamental fact that US food tends to cost more.
    Has much changed from the days of the horse meat scandal where when the shit hit the fan the only supermarket in the UK who could actually trace their meat supplies was Morrisons (and now they are owned by US private equity who are asset stripping, so i doubt that is true). And the reality of even big brands was very messy where the meat in your frozen meal came from e.g. a Romanian meat processing place that mixed horse and beef of questinable origins very casually

    That all been said it is always about the chlorinated chicken, but nobody seems bothered that Iceland stuff mostly comes from places like Thailand and lots of supermarket meat is cheap Brazilian, neither of which if we are honest is going to be top quality. That how Iceland does meals for a pennies.
  • DecrepiterJohnLDecrepiterJohnL Posts: 30,205
    Leon said:

    Because it is stupid. Americans don't and won't work in factories for Cambodian wages. So presumably these are going to be robotised factories. Which doesn't mean more jobs for Americans just fewer jobs for Cambodians

    If Trump wants to "level the playing field" and make America wealthy again he should look at massive American corporations - eg Apple - that book all their profits in Ireland or Amsterdam or the Kerguelen Islands - and thereby pay almost nothing - and force them to reshore that cash

    That would be justified and also economically sensible, and good for America (even if it fucks Ireland, but hey ho)
    Which is why America (and Trump) sees British and other foreign taxes on American corporations as hostile.
This discussion has been closed.