 I guess we all know these lines. Made in Germany, Japan, Sweden, Belgium, Australia, China, USA. It's the best way to see where your products come from. The finest clothing is made in Italy. The best wine comes from France. Long lasting products made in the USA. Are those quality machines obviously from Germany? Companies like adding the country name. It makes a product feel, well, good, durable, authentic. It's for marketing reasons. But here's the thing, nowadays products are made all over the world. Here, let me show you. A shirt says it's made in the USA. But more realistically, it goes something like this. Raw materials are sourced in Africa, progressed in China, coloured in India, stitched together in Turkey and finally packed and assembled in the USA. So yeah, the label isn't really honest. Nowadays it's rare that a made in the USA actually is entirely made in the USA. However, some companies truly do their best to get every step done locally. And let's say Switzerland. It takes much more effort and money making stuff locally. So these guys probably do it because they want to support the local economy, make quality products, create local jobs or reduce transportation. And others don't care about this stuff but they like to have the label so they go for the cheapest places all over the world and finally assemble them in Switzerland. A completely different approach but they end up with the same label. But only one of them truly deserves it. See, this label doesn't really have a meaning anymore. So here's my tiny suggestion. Adding a percentage. It's pretty much the same thing but simply add a percentage. This shows you how much of it is actually authentic. If it is entirely made in China with just a small step in Italy, low percentage. If companies do their very best making it completely locally, a high percentage. It takes one good calculation but gives an honest view where it's really being made and separates the true from the false. People, if this suggestion sounds good, you know what to do. Companies try it out unless of course you're scared that people find out.