by Tinker » Tue Aug 02, 2011 5:32 pm
The economy must change. But it needn't so much be forced to change. It will change of its own accord. The trade deficit will re-balance as the purchasing power of the nations where we have a deficit, increases.
The economy as it has been has been modeled off of soviet bloc vs the west, and everyone else. Or 1st world, 2nd world and third world. Then it moved to Developed World, Developing World, Shithole. The Developing world have enough talent and infrastructure to take advantage of opportunities to manufacture. The lower skill level it requires the lower barrier to entry a nation has, the lower down the ladder you can go to find a nation in which to build your factory. As more factories land, they bring money, money brings prosperity to some, the prosperous begin to build hospitals, roads and other civil infrastructure, much of this is built around the development of companies and jobs. When the developing world gets more of these jobs their purchasing power increases. The more factory jobs, the more supermarket jobs, the more supermarket jobs the more construction workers, the more businesses the more janitors the more workers the more bodegas, and so on and so forth. As these jobs increase so does the infrastructural support for those businesses. More lawyers for instance. As those people increase their purchasing power beyond shelter and sustenance, the more money to purchase products from other nations. Being able to buy from other nations spurs growth in those nations.
So far we have had a differential in the way people value an individual's time across geographical boundaries. The more that gap closes, the more the trade deficit will close. As long as there are vast differentials of this type there will always be trade deficits of sorts.
As long as China was reinvesting its capital into American financial instruments the trade deficit did not matter.
The canary didn't die because this mine is dangerous, it died because it's lazy and wasn't raised with a proper work ethic.