by Caskhades » Wed Mar 02, 2011 4:19 pm
1. Labor costs are not the only costs firms incur. How much can you trust business partners to deliver on time? How much can you trust co-investors not to defect and run away with your business plan? How easily are contracts enforced if and when breaches occur? What is the quality of relevant infrastructure? Where is the client base located and how vital is frequent and easy contact with them to the business? How about taxes and red tape? How about political stability and the likelihood of government seizing the business (like in Russia and Venezuela)?
2. Workers have strong preferences about where they live. Highly skilled workers like to live in clean, fun, safe and hip places, and especially like large homes to raise kids and park expensive cars. Many ventures are started by people in universities and recruit from universities. There's a reason why places like Cambridge, Pasadena, Palo Alto, Ann Arbor and others are prospering even when their home states are suffering.
3. My work has taken me to 4 continents, and as a general rule Americans are among the most reliable, well-trained and hard-working people on the planet. There is too much paperwork, yes, and too many powerpoints and pointless meetings, and too much touchy-feeling "work environment" crap (nothing quite like mandatory "fun-days").
4. The US govt is spending 1.5 trillion more money than it has, to prop up consumption that the public would not afford otherwise. This suggests a medium-term readjustment of about -10% in living standards. That would not be the end of the world. Have you seen how many middle class Americans, after 2 years of "horrible recession" have the newest cars, vacation homes and boats by this or that lake? There's ample room in the middle class for belt tightening. It's the lower class that's fucked, as always.
5. Spending >$100K on four-year degrees in Political Science, English Lit, Psych or even Arts is a luxury American parents like to purchase for their kids. Cohorts of unemployed older siblings will eventually convince young Timmy and Betty to think twice before taking those six classes in Drama instead of Calculus.
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