U.S. Trade with China: Who Wins?

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Uploaded by on Jan 18, 2011

From inbriefvideos.com - A simple explanation of the complex issues surrounding US-China trade and the a look at ways to boost the US economy.

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  • That's just the message we'd hoped to get across with this video--mutual prosperity is a good way to put it. Thanks for taking the time to share your response.

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  • @laalfombra221 I disagree because manufacturing ANYTHING is cheaper in china thus making it inefficient to produce anywhere else. What innovation and education does is provide SMART jobs with high demands in our own country. We will never be a manufacturing/factory-based economy as long as production costs more here.

  • Innovation is not important...it is the manufacturing of the innovation that is.

    Germany invented the car, the US middle class was built on manufacturing that German invention.

    I'd prefer a Twitter or Facebook to be innovated/invented in another country, and instead have the USA manufacture the servers, computers, laptops, smart-phones, and other hardware necessary to access Twitter or Facebook.

    Employees at Facebook or Twitter-around 4000

    Employees manufacturing hardware-more than 1 million.

  • Excellent illustration and conveying difficult ideas simply. Looking forward to seeing more of your projects.

  • Very timely release with President Hu at the white house this week. With the Chinese economy growing over 10% this year, a message of mutual success is a good reminder that Chinese prosperity is not necessarily in opposition to US prosperity. Very clear way to touch on a complicated subject, nice work.

  • Thank you for taking the time to watch the video and for expressing your thoughts about the topic. This particular video hopes to explain the complexity of the topic of trade between these two powerful nations in a simple way, and to explain the incredible opportunities both countries have to move forward in the future.

  • Chinese never push America to repay the debt, and there is a highly likely chance that China would continue to buy US debts in the next 50 years. What went wrong is the private enterprise called the Federal Reserves kept channeling those debts to the wrong hands such as Wall Street tycoons and blood-sucking bankers instead of building the economy for the common people. So instead of blaming China, the US government-corporate complex should be the first to blame!!!

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