China Probes US Renewable Energy Policy
PolygamousRanchKid writes "China's Commerce Ministry on Friday announced an investigation into U.S. government policy and subsidy support for renewable energy, after a U.S. decision earlier this month to probe sales of Chinese-made solar panels in the United States. 'The Ministry of Commerce has decided to initiate a trade barrier investigation into policy support and subsidies for the U.S. renewable energy sector,' a statement on the ministry's website (www.mofcom.gov.cn) said. The announcement said Chinese companies argued that the U.S. policies 'constitute a trade barrier against the export of Chinese renewable energy products to the United States.'"
Solyndra got cheap loans from the Obama administration, yet they want belly up despite their unfair advantages.
9/11: Never forget it was a false-flag operation
how about a probe of china nuke plant safety?
We need to do everything we can to protect our economy from China. China complaining just shows we are starting to do things right.
how about a probe of china currency rigging?
I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
See that, it's like a crack dealer... you start to get off the junk and they try to turn you into a two bit whore. Let China burn.
Fuck Them.
how about a probe of US oil rigging?
Or, even better, a US probe of China oil rigging in the “West Philippine Sea"? ;)
http://news.xinhuanet.com/english2010/indepth/2011-11/21/c_131259724.htm
'A couple of months ago, Prof. Lyle Goldstein painted a doleful picture in the Foreign Policy magazine. He said if U.S. leaders heed his advice, they should shed most commitments in Southeast Asia, which he portrays as a region of trivial importance situated adjacent to an increasingly powerful China. He maintained that "Southeast Asia matters not a whit in the global balance of power."'
I see China is mastering the art of He said, she said.
Back in the day, the US would (correctly) accuse China of something and it would go unanswered, so everyone would assume it was true:
US: "China's doing bad things."
China: (silence)
Populace: "Yeah, I guess it's true."
Now, in the 21st century, it goes like this:
US: "China's doing bad things."
China: "The US is doing bad things."
Populace: "Well, both sides are accusing each other. I guess they're both equally bad. The truth lies somewhere in the middle, right?"
China: (Laughs maniacally, thinks "This is the best way to do public relations. We don't even have to change anything.")
Reminds me of how China would constantly get hit with human-rights abuses accusations, then they started writing up biased reports against everyone else. "See, everyone else in the world is just as bad!"
Is there really such a thing as "free" trade amongst authoritarian countries? Do the Chinese economic practices of the laogai qualify as a fair trade practice?
Maybe we should give up this farce of free trade. The only people who benefit from "free" trade are the gangsters and criminals who own and control major corporations and the bankers who fund them.
unless they are too cheap in which case tax them.
Those whole issue of subsidies and trade with China are moot. Chinese currency policy already has a far greater impact on trade than any tariff or subsidy. China likes to claim that they don't manipulate their currency to gain an advantage but that is bold faced lie. European empires played currency games with each other for centuries and Japan/South Korea did the same in the 70s and 80s, we know exactly what it looks like.
Countries suppress the value of their currency to aid exports. The result is a massive trade imbalance, huge currency reserves, and lots of inflation. Now these things can happen without currency manipulation for a short while. But when the effect is massive and long lasting its a pretty good indication of government intervention.
This might be just the kick in the pants China needs to improve their greenhouse gas emissions. What if solar panels (and Chinese other goods) were subject to a greenhouse offset tariff, with a significant portion of the revenue to offset tax credits for green energy investment?
The us forbids the importation of manufactured goods that are sold for less than what they cost to manufacture. Otherwise foreign firms with deep enough pockets could drive their American competitors completely out of business.
Any us firm that suspects that this "dumping" is taking place can ask the Feds to investigate, which may result in a punitive tariff being used to level the playing field.
Ubuntu comes frOm south Africa and is distributed free of charge. Why can't Microsoft request a punitive tariff on it's import?
Such tariffs are applied quite a lot but I've never heard of them being applied to software.
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I support anything that protects the US market from Chinese goods.
The only way out of the recession is to stop buying and subsidizing the Chinese. This goes for everything from Electronics to Rice to Grad Students.
This whole globalization scheme is working out wonderfully. We'll have a global aristocracy at the end of the decade if we can just keep it from blowing up.
how about a probe of whether Chinese-produced solar panels are actually just planks of wood painted with black paint?
China takes a flying F@#$ off a cliff. isn't this the pot calling the kettle black! We should tell China to go to hell. We should put tariffs in place for any and ALL goods coming FROM China into the U.S.. That might level the playing field with their blatant currency manipulations.
The Truth is a Virus!!!
They come right out and say so in their annual report.
By law and by the constitution the us is permitted to inspect and charge tariffs on imported goods. They can even prevent the item's import if it does not comply with customs regulations.
I don't see how using the Internet as the port of entry has anything to do with it.
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So after China has mastered the art of the counter claim, next comes the defensive art of getting your attack in first:
US: "dum di dum di da - what a nice day it is"
China; "The US is doing a bad thing"
US: "We absolutely deny doing anything bad, ever, for all eternity <FX: thumps table with clenched fist>"
Populace: "Sounds like a bit of an over-reaction, maybe there IS something going on?"
However, ISTM they're not being a lot more subtle: "You want us to lend you $ X trillion? Sure, but we don't want to see any TV or newspaper exposee's about our human rights, or pollution, or foreign policy, or ..."
politicians are like babies' nappies: they should both be changed regularly and for the same reasons
We should put tariffs in place for any and ALL goods coming FROM China into the U.S.
And what do you hope to accomplish with doing that? You think causing a global recession, massive increases in a huge array of products, and significant damage to the multitude of business that do business with the worlds second largest economy is a good thing? Relations with China are not nearly as simple as you seem to believe...
That might level the playing field with their blatant currency manipulations.
China is/was manipulating their currency but that's not really as big a problem as it is often made out to be - certainly not the biggest problem. There are bigger problems. Forget currency subsidies, a lot of the large Chinese manufacturing concerns are directly owned by the government (including the military) and are given the sorts of advantages you might expect in such a situation. US companies have rarely been permitted to operate with the same degree of freedom in China that they enjoy elsewhere. The playing field is definitely not level over there. Doesn't mean US companies can't compete at all, but it is hard when the government is your direct competitor.
Plus a lot of the reason much manufacturing has moved there is simply that China has a lot of inexpensive labor. They have 5X the population of the US so labor is a resource they have an ample supply of. If you have a lot of something you can charge less for it. Simple supply and demand. That means goods with a high labor content are far more likely to be produced there. Having lots of people creates problems but it also is a competitive advantage in some ways too.
This i quite amusing, chinese copy everything, including , diplomacy methods, right now they just use the the same weapons that attack them, and more if in SOPA gets approved, they can make some pain in the ass statements when someone attacks their great firewall.
US protectionism = patriotism
Foreign country protectionism = communism
You must not be following the occupy wall street movement. The goods you purchase from American companies are largely made in china. American manufacturing is largely a thing of the past.
While we do still make software, piracy is rampant in china, with the Chinese government doing little to stop it.
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Dear China,
Screw you. We have our own set of problems to solve and we're going to take care of our own.
Sincerely,
The People of The United States
Reciprocity.
China requires foreign corporations to be 50% owned by the Chinese gov and/or a Chinese company ? US should require the same of Chinese firms.
China manipulates their currency to gain an export advantage ? US should, once a month, calculate a percentage based tariff on all Chinese goods.
etc.
Reciprocity people. They can shoot lasers at a mirror all day long, and burn themselves in the process.
Much of the collapse was a direct result of Americans being unable to pay for the things they bought.
This is blatantly false. There were bad loans, but they did not cause the collapse. The collapse was caused by packaging these loans together, reselling them, chopping them up, mixing them with other chopped up packages, rating these re-packaged loans fraudulently high, de-regulation on the insurance for these loans that did not have to be backed by sufficient capitol, and the ratings groups betting against the packages that they rated high.
To say this collapse was caused by Americans being unable to pay for the things they bought is naive at best. The average American home buyer deserves some of the blame to be as gullible as they were to over extend themselves on homes they clearly could not afford. But this must be tempered by the fact that they were often duped into believing they could afford it, and we are STILL having to fight tooth and nail to get regulation on the loan industry to get the terms of a loan clearly stated in plain english!
The USD that China has borrowed is sold by the US government to fund the US debt of people buying things from China with credit.
The problem for the USA is that the proportion of Chinese trade that involves the USA is going down every year, reducing China's economic dependence on the USA.
the probe of US currency rigging. I heard whenever their banks are about to fail, they just print money to make sure it doesn't happen. Scandalous.
Good people go to bed earlier.
You seem to forget the likes of BMW, Ducati and Triumph.
It is funny that here in the UK, a UK made bike (Triumph) range is generally cheaper than the Japanese Competition.
If you take a trip around their factory, you will soon see why. All the best CAR production methods in use on a Motorcycle production line.
IMHO, Harleys are very much the reserve of people who have more money than sense or like to get where they are going rather slowly. Following one along a twisty road is real entertainment. It is a miracle they can get round the bends in one piece.
Disclaimer, I've been riding Triumph's for 2 months short of 40 years. I currenty ride a 2011 Tiger 1050. My first Triumph, a 1969 TR6 is still running with 310K miles on the clock.
Fun Fact: The Solyndra loans were approved of during the Bush administration. Have fun with your partisan pissing contest.
I'm sorry, you seem a bit short on facts. Here are some facts from the left leaning New York Times and Los Angeles Times.
... during the period when Solyndra’s loan guarantee was under review and management by the Energy Department, the company spent nearly $1.8 million on Washington lobbyists, employing six firms with ties to members of Congress and officials of the Obama White House. None of the other three solar panel manufacturers that eventually got federal loan guarantees spent a dime on lobbyists."
Preliminary approval under Bush, final approval under Obama. Then financial analysis was skipped under Obama and warnings were ignored. Plus Solyndra's owner was a top Obama campaign contributor. Plus the Obama administration structured the deal so that investors would get paid before taxpayers if the company failed.
"George B. Kaiser, a billionaire from Tulsa, Okla., was a fund-raiser for Mr. Obama’s 2008 campaign and the backer of a foundation that is Solyndra’s leading investor
""“It was alarming,” said Frank Rusco, a program director at the Government Accountability Office, which found that Energy Department preliminary loan approvals — including the one for Solyndra — were granted at times before officials had completed mandatory evaluations of the financial and engineering viability of the projects. “They can’t really evaluate the risks without following the rules.” The Energy Department’s senior staff has acknowledged in interviews the intense pressure from top Obama administration officials to rush stimulus spending out the door. “We had to knock down some barriers standing in the way to get these projects funded,” Matthew C. Rogers, the Energy Department official overseeing the loan guarantee program, said in March 2009, just days before Solyndra got its provisional loan commitment. Mr. Rogers said Energy Secretary Steven Chu had been personally reviewing loan applications and urging faster action on them.""
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/23/us/politics/in-rush-to-assist-solyndra-united-states-missed-warning-signs.html?pagewanted=all
"At a White House meeting in late October, Lawrence H. Summers, then director of the National Economic Council, and Timothy F. Geithner, the Treasury secretary, expressed concerns that the selection process for federal loan guarantees wasn't rigorous enough and raised the risk that funds could be going to the wrong companies, including ones that didn't need the help. Energy Secretary Steven Chu, also at the meeting, had a different view. Under pressure from Congress to speed up the loans, he wanted less scrutiny from the Treasury Department and the Office of Management and Budget, or OMB."
http://articles.latimes.com/2011/sep/26/nation/la-na-energy-loans-20110927
"Energy Department officials were warned that their plan to help a failing solar company by restructuring its $535 million federal loan could violate the law and should be cleared with the Justice Department, according to newly obtained e-mails from within the Obama administration. The e-mails show that Energy Department officials moved ahead anyway with a new deal that would repay company investors before taxpayers if the company defaulted."
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/solyndra-obama-and-rahm-emanuel-pushed-to-spotlight-energy-company/2011/10/07/gIQACDqSTL_story.html
USA has their policies out front. OTH, China does not. They have many hidden things, which is what the communist have been doing for many many decades. So far, we have been subsidizing everybodies panels equally. I think that it is in the west's best interest to drop that, and say that it will subsidize only those nations that do not manipulate their money against the dollar, or have trade barriers and are not dumping. IOW, it is time to level the field.
Build a wall right round the country and stop all people and trade crossing it's borders.
You certainly don't welcome us Foreigners to your shores these days. We are all regarded as Terrorists until proven innocent.
I say this as an employee of an American Company.
I get more smiles getting into Russia than I do trying to enter the US.
I used to visit the US regularly on Holiday. Not now. That is your loss of foreign income. I think I'll go to Greece next year. They are far more welcoming that you lot.
I'd rather be riding my '63 Triumph T120.
At one time Microft required oems to pay the windows license fee for sac pc they sold, even if windows wasn't actually installed on it. They made the dubious claim that this compensated them for the piracy that would result if pcs were sold with no os at all.
That practice was banned in their antitrust lawsuit. Now pcs are sold without operating systems all the time, with Linux being the os most commonly installed by the end users themselves.
While I agree it would be impractical to charge import duties in open source, it would not be by any means impossible. Just put a blue coat antivirus firewall on every Internet cable that crosses a us border.
While one would still be permitted to download open source files, they would be impounded by a customs department file server. Only by paying the tariff could you receive your file.
Chinas great firewall is quite leaky, but American defense contractors were the original builders of the Internet. Just think about what they could do with the help if the NSA.
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Ah yes, China has "borrowed" USD.
And I thought they borrowed USD to the US government, and not a small amount either:
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/moneymatters/ss/How-Much-US-Debt-Does-China-Own.htm
It is correct that China keeps the Yuan Renminbi low, in order to do so, it has to sell Yuan Renminbi and buy USD from people willing to sell USD. It also will invest these USD somewhere, or buy US debt. This works due to the USA and other states importing tons of goods from China and increasing US living standards with them. It is ironic that "communist" China is better at "free trade" than the USA, with the assistance of the US industry, which finds it more profitable to do so.
Your country would be broke without China, and it is quite disconcerting to have such a cause of conflict between two large nations.
And yes, you are right with one of your arguments, but this is because your arguments contradict each other: You blame China both for withdrawing USD and not withdrawing them.
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
... to do just what he wants, give him a cookie."
You must be quite young, because you clearly don't know much about the software industry. Get back to me after you've read all the recent stories published here about the patent wars.
Actually red hat does not give away manufactured goods of any sort for free. Red hat enterprise Linux is colossally expensive.
Even if they did, it's perfectly legal fir American manufacturers to practice dumping domestically. Totally hypocritical sure, but also totally legal.
Now red hat does provide free source code. That does not meet the legal definition of a manufactured good. Only the compiled binaries do.
It is for precisely that reason that you don't violate software patents by writing the source code to programs that infringe patent claims. You only infringe a patent when you create an unlicensed implementation. For software, only compiled binaries constitute implementations. I don't know how patent law applies to languages that aren't compiled.
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Can i clean your clock?
I misread that and took it as a proposition, thought I was on adult matchmaker for a second or two.
Microsoft sells desktop, server and embedded operating systems. They sell applications like Microsoft office and server software like SQL server and Internet information server.
There us just about nothing that Microsoft sells for which the equivalent functionality cannot be had in open source. If you install ubuntu on your home computer and serve your company's website with a lamp stack, those are two computers all by yourself that you have lost Microsoft thousands of dollars in sales.
The headhunters I have to deal with to get software consulting gigs always require me to send them my resume in word format. But it has been years since I last used word; instead I edit my resume In open office then save in word format. Similarly I use openoffice calc for my budget rather than excel, and gnucash for my accounting rather than Microsoft money.
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Microsoft could petition to have the tariff based on the lost sales that would result from a single item being installed then duplicated.
It wouldn't be hard to estimate how many copies of ubuntu get installed within the us. Just analyze the log files from a variety if web servers. Alternatively ISP packet sniffers could provide the data for the estimate.
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Personally I'm surprised there are so many solar panels imported from China. The profit margins are so slim in PV that it doesn't really make sense, at least for large-scale solar plants. Chinese companies are already building production facilities in the U.S. for just this reason. But then I suppose the end goal is to sell modules cheap and take a hit now while driving competitors out of business, so they can cash in later and manufacture everything in the U.S.
The US investigation against China was initiated by a German company's US branch. After the US vs. China trade war started, Germany will be the big winner, good move, isn't it?
There is a spark in every single flame bait point.
The US should do everything in it's power to protect both it's markets and domestic industries. China does the same why shouldn't we? One of our biggest assets is a large wealthy (compared to the rest of the world) population. We are practically giving it away with all these stupid free trade zones.
Or think about all the research going into developing so called cheap solar panels like thin-film, which would be sold to American consumers at 65% of the price of polysilicon panel yet they would last a tenth of the life expectancy of polysilicon panels. So americans would have to replace them every seven years, this is the model which our British Over Lords desire. We want polysilicon panels from China not those cheap thin-film panels the British Royal Family is trying to sell to Americans. Fu K your ARM processor too. "Tea Party" can Americans really be that stupid that they don't understand.
I don't see how downloading over the Internet doesn't qualify as importation of a manufactured good. Software is not free speech. The fact that Internet packets aren't inspected at the us border doesn't mean that they couldn't be if us vendors of proprietary software were to raise hell about predatory dumping by foreign open source firms.
All it would take is to install an antivirus firewall on every Internet border crossing. Before you claim that you would route around the damage, consider what it would be like to do time for smuggling.
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This is the very first time I've discussed this in public, but I've been puzzling over this question for well over a decade.
The US doesn't charge tariffs for most imported goods. If you lived in Canada and paid ten grand to download a high-end foreign software product over the Internet, and you didn't pay Canada Customs That Which Is Caesar's, you might well end up doing hard time.
Non one has yet given me any reason to believe that software is in any substantial way different from a product that takes physical form. It costs a lot of money to develop, as coders are highly paid, and most substantial software products require enormous amounts of labor, not just for the software engineers, but qa, documentation, management, the equipment and software used to develop it and so on.
I'm totally serious about this. Punitive tariffs are applied all the damn time. You just don't hear about most of them because they are applied to isolated products. They only get press when there is a tit-for-tat between two countries as with China and the US over solar energy.
Software is one of the United States' few remaining really profitable industries. I've never heard anything about the anti-dumping regulations that would imply that the United States' proprietary software vendors qualify for tariff protection any less than the vendors who make physically manufactured goods.
Linux is NOT free! That's just what its price is, which is my whole point. IBM all by itself spends a billion dollars a year on Linux development.
Neither does the fact that Ubuntu and other foreign open source arrive in the US over the Internet means that it somehow isn't being sold for less than what it costs to make it.
If you really don't want to see Blue Coat antivirus firewalls being used to stop open source binaries from crossing into the US, you need to do something to get these regulations changed.
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China has done exceptionally well partly because they pegged their currency to be lower than ours a specific amount. This has been true for over 20 years. That makes it impossible for us to sell things to them at a competitive price, and impossible to make things here cheaper than they make them there. That is illegal currency manipulation, and is vastly different from what the Fed did.
A big part of the housing crisis was caused by China flooding the market with cheap dollars. They wanted their money invested (whether part of a nefarious plot or not), and Western loans against real estate is where it went. When all of the good borrowers had homes, the investors (China) lowered the standards that underwriters had to follow, and the underwriters were more than happy to write the new loans. When that tier of borrower dried up, they lowered their standards again. And so on. It got to the point where all you needed to buy a house was to sign a paper saying you could afford it.
Of course, the banks were more than happy to be the conduits because they shared no risk - all of the loans were sold.
We all bear responsibility for the crash - all of us that borrowed that cheap money, and all of us that buy things from China to save a buck or two.
The fact that it would be expensive and impractical to filter every Internet border crossing doesn't mean the Federal Government couldn't pass a law that required it. Failure to do so would mean heavy fines or imprisonment, as would any manner of importation of Open Source software by finding some way to get around United States Customs' firewall.
Yes, source code is free speech, but then it's not an implementation. Software that you can actually execute is a tangible good just like a Nike sneaker or a length of steel pipe. I'd like to see what happens when Richard Stallman shows up in a dirty T-shirt, blue jeans and bare feet to testify to a Congressional subcommittee as to why America's two most profitable companies should not enjoy the same kinds of legal protections that a steel fabricator would.
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Nobody seems to be clueing in to my assertion that the Feds could require antivirus firewalls at every Internet border crossing. It would not be hard at all to program those firewalls with the checksums for every open source file found on the entire Internet.
To create an Internet connection with some foreign router without placing such a firewall between would carry a heavy criminal penalty. Recall that the guy who wrote PGP got prosecuted for exporting munitions in violations of arms control laws for no other reason than that he put the PGP source code on his own FTP site, purely within US borders.
It would not work at all for Canonical to have a US presence such as a post office box, or even a brick-and-mortar office. To the extent that the product they provide is developed overseas, they would have to pay the punitive tariff for whatever they imported.
While one can argue that once a single copy of Ubuntu has been imported into the US, every US resident can obtain a copy of that master copy for free, without paying the tariff. But Microsoft - and Apple - could reasonably argue that the amount of that punitive tariff ought to be based on how many copies of that single master import actually get produced, with that number being multiplied by the current wholesale price of Windows or Mac OS X.
It would cost in the billions of dollars of dollars to import a single ISO installer image. What do you suppose would happen if US Customs caught you failing to pay a billion dollar tariff?
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This is a bit offtopic, but I came across this article on EDN that does a bit of technical analysis on Solyndra's product itself, and what were some of the benefits and shortcomings of their tubular solar collector design:
http://www.edn.com/article/520093-Solyndra_Its_technology_and_why_it_failed.php
It was easy to tout the latter's unique panel design composed of multiple cylindrical modules to a non-technical audience. They seemed Apple-like in their sophisticated industrial design. Solyndra assembly and installation were elegant and slick. Perhaps these qualities played better at dinner parties than discussion of efficiency ratings, production costs or manufacturing scalability.
This whole globalization scheme is working out wonderfully. We'll have a global aristocracy at the end of the decade if we can just keep it from blowing up.
More to the point.
Hitler blamed the Jews and called them a global aristocratic scourge. There are those in the United States and elsewhere that would label the Chinese as the "Jews of the Orient". We are treading on very shaky ground by blaming an up and coming entrepreneurial economic class within China for our penchant for materialism and the perils of the Walmart Nation situation caused by so called but not so free trade. If you have a skilled, state educated cheap labour force at your disposal and you have the blessing of that state to go out and conquer the world with cargo your employees create in a company/state run factory city then you will oust the competition. To paraphrase Confucius "Your are easily conquered with your desires". The only problem is that how shall we pay for our materialistic stupidy...we are selling out our children's future for cheap gadgets and cheap goods. Our greed is our peril as a race of people.
Next time you see a shark swim by with no fins understand that it was your last purchase of an Ipad or whatever that put its fins into that soup that is now being eaten somewhere in China by one of the new aristocrats.
The global awareness of what is really going on is what the occupy movement is really all about and will spread to more than just North America. In time as more intelligent individuals communicate with each other about peaceful protest against "blind consumerism" and the manipulation of the masses that is going on with cargo and endless piles of junk goods by global corporations.
when China and America accuse each other, they probably are both equally bad. The truth probably isn't in the middle though...they are probably both exactly as bad as they think they can get away with being.
Fuck the chinks
Our country would still have expensive but quality products if it weren't for China. It wouldn't be broke, because the production of those goods would be coming from factories in the US who pay greater than slave wages for production. Instead of rampant unemployment, we'd have unskilled labor working in factories - just like we did when China was busy starving it's people for the last century.
I'll take a lawnmower that lasts a decade for $500 over a lawnmower that lasts 6 months for $100 all day long. You continue to believe that China is somehow helping the US - I've never heard a more comical explanation of the China/US relationship.
o The US unemployment is NOT caused by currency rigging, but by over paid American workers, especially American Labor Union workers. The USA minimum wages is $6 or more per hours while is China is $1 to $2 per hour. In fact, American Labor Union wages can be $50 per hour plus benefits.
In order to be competitive, the USA worker must accept the same wages, otherwise USA companies will continue to run overseas to India, Vietnam, China, and Brazil, etc. and along with them American jobs.
These AMERICAN companies MUST do that because AMERICAN stockholders demand good or at least fair returns on their investments.
If anything, blame it on AMERICAN stock holders, NOT currency rates. If you feel that it is unfair, then why don't you buy some American Stocks and get in on the profits yourself?.
Currency rates has very little to do with it.
If the US is broke and default on its debt, what is China going to do?
So many economists coming out of the woodwork... Plenty of teenagers posting on here, too...
I'm sure the Chicomms are talking about all Chinese made panels but the bad part about it is U.S. companies who are producing panels in China are being shut out of subsidies here; being negated from huge energy subsidies just because Uncle Barry wants to grease the palms of union cronies.
On another note many of the panels of US companies, made in China, outperform much of what is made right here in the US. Just another example of bad politics, cronyism and corruption. LOL, this is the Change that many people Hoped. What a steaming pile of dog crap.
www.large-battery.com
It wouldn't be a problem if it was petroleum products that China was exporting to the US. The fact is, that the US will never subject their big oil buddies to compete with Chinese renewable. That's what this was and is all about. I first read about this in a Chinese newspaper over a year ago. Nothing new - corrupt unsustainable world is still on track.
Stupidity isn't required. Even brilliant minds are subject to memetic infection from vectors hostile to the host.
Well argued, but not everyone in the US thinks like you do AND lets acts follow.
The country thinks it is American to live under a bridge and object to a public health care system, and maybe it is.
It also is American to blame things on China, and at the same time to applaud companies like Apple who produce in China to increase their profits and number of units sold.
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
Well, nothing. But the US might have a harder time buying oil and other goods from other nations.
Hey don't blame me, IANAB
Very nice sentiments, but the vast majority of your fellow citizens don't agree with you.
American consumers - note once again, that's American consumers - have had the choice to buy cheap Chinese products or quality American ones, and they have voted with their wallets, countless millions of times. It's the sum total of all those votes that has got your trade balance where it is today.