Alert icon
We're changing our privacy policy. This stuff matters.  Learn more  Dismiss

China & India - should Americans be afraid

Loading...

Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon
Upgrade to the latest Flash Player for improved playback performance. Upgrade now or more info.
1,958
Loading...
Alert icon
Sign in or sign up now!
Alert icon

Uploaded by on Sep 19, 2011

6 Dec 2010 RT
[Background: Only 1 in 5 Americans believe the US economy is the world's strongest, while half the people polled say that China's economy is in fact the strongest. Many people believe that competition from China will negatively impact their lives.]

J.P. Friere, Associate Commentary Editor, Washington Examiner -
"China is actually worse in stratification. Look at the Chinese peasants. That's a consequence of not enabling people to actually create wealth. In America you are allowed to start a small business or to start some venture to create capital and that's good."

Joseph Weisenthal, Deputy Editor, Business Insider --
"I don't think we should be worried about it. There are effects on commodities and the search for oil which will certainly have an impact on our economy but I don't think it should be a worry" [Amazing]

[On China's rising power, globalization & wage threats for Americans]

J.P. Friere,
"Americans' quality of life has increased because we've had historically such a great economy that we could leverage to that, we could get trade agreements with countries like China. People have benefitted from that. If you ever go to a store that sells goods that are manufactured in other countries people are able to get them cheaper [!]. Now does that mean it might hurt our manufacturing? [Absolutely] It actually could but the way you fix that is that you allow manufacturing to rise in this country. We need universities to turn out people that create stuff [oh my god]

[Should the US focus on improving education and skills?]
"It would appear that a lot of our population for whatever reason isn't fit to go into a 4-year school or work in an office. Yet on the lower end of job opportunities we are not thinking about what we could do to become more competitive, reducing our own costs. We should reform the bureaucratic aspects that are hampering manufacturing, labour laws or environment laws. So we should actually think about how to open up and make more competitive some of those lower end industries. Not because making stuff per se is the route to prosperity but because we have a large chunk of the population that would be more suited for."

[The US lags behind in primary and secondary education]
"That is huge and I do not know what the Chinese model would be. But we would want one that embraces our sort of cultural character which is more school choice, more charter schools...things that enable people that if they have an interest early on to encourage them to pursue that."




Nope I don't think so.You need to build the technical knowledge base of the country. That means planning (yes, planning) the education for the children. That means to get rid of wishy-washy subjects that kids in the west unfortunately got side-tracked into in recent decades. To prevent a strong demand for those wasteful subjects I would target government money and give big incentives for children who decided to pursue technical subjects like computing, maths, engineering and science.




[On jobs being sent overseas]
"Knowledge-based has been outsourced. But I don't think anybody really knows."

[On India -- India is a country that Americans think are stealing their jobs...but there is a growing middle-class there to sell them our products. Why don't we talk about that?]

"You think about the taxpayer dollars that plug the holes. Unfortunately it is just redistribution."

[They want a protectionist model for jobs in the United States?]
"There is this going the easy route idea. If we just tax foreign companies or reduce imports than naturally the jobs will spring up in the United States. To me that's a short-cut. Before we get that drastic there are things we do to become more competitive such as eliminating regulation, the tax code could be simplified....so before we go down this trade war idea [!] there are a lot of simple things we could do to improve our economy just getting on an even playing field with our own regulations."

Category:

People & Blogs

Tags:

License:

Standard YouTube License

  • likes, 1 dislikes

Link to this comment:

Share to:
see all

All Comments (3)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • screw china, go america

Loading...

Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more