4/30/2012 11:03:47 AM
4/30/2012 11:10:47 AM
There are two different categories of determining profit. Marginal profit is the amount of money a company makes on each single product they sell. Profit margin is their revenue - operating costs for the company as a whole.
4/30/2012 11:18:34 AM
http://blog.marksweep.com/post/20469283331/the-beer-game-or-why-apple-cant-build-ipads-in-theThe profit margin is greatly affected by economies of scale and the efficiency of the supply chain. That article explains a little why apple, and most labor based manufacturing, is probably never coming back stateside.
4/30/2012 11:31:19 AM
4/30/2012 11:44:50 AM
I pay ~$60-70/month for data and enough minutes and texts to where I never have overages. I am with Verizon, which is generally accepted as the best company in terms of wireless performance, and I bought an iPhone for $99. But yes, please keep telling me how I am not getting value for my money.
4/30/2012 1:08:39 PM
Woo! $25 a month for plenty of data, minutes, and texts to where I never have overages! Although my Triumph cost more than you paid, at $129. Such is the beauty of capitalism. If you want to pay for it, the rest of us will tend to let you
4/30/2012 1:12:20 PM
I'm not interested in Cricket.
4/30/2012 1:13:26 PM
by the way, which mobile phone manufacturer(s) does things differently in terms of supply chain, working conditions for overseas employees, etc.?[Edited on April 30, 2012 at 1:18 PM. Reason : .]
4/30/2012 1:17:48 PM
you guys ever heard of Coltan? long story short, its derivatives are in most cell phones, computers, and other electronic products.by the time it became fashionable to make movies and sing songs about blood diamonds and other bling, folks in Africa were already killing each other over this stuff.get on your google machines and look this shit up... i'm not really providing any commentary on this, just wanted to make sure you guys knew about it.and just FYIhttp://www.dol.gov/ILAB/regs/eo13126/main.htm
4/30/2012 1:57:54 PM
4/30/2012 2:40:16 PM
^ yup, being co-located to your component supply chain is absolutely critical.
4/30/2012 4:45:26 PM
but i thought the government couldn't create jobs?
4/30/2012 6:12:53 PM
The government can create jobs. "if every worker was staffed in the army and fleet/we'd have full employment and nothing to eat"What you are thinking about is that as the government creates jobs production falls, which means wages must fall, which means unemployment must rise, which means private businesses and jobs must be destroyed. [Edited on April 30, 2012 at 7:27 PM. Reason : .,.]
4/30/2012 7:23:26 PM
5/1/2012 9:25:51 AM
Cutting the corporate tax has been a major talking point of the Obama campaign, so...
5/1/2012 9:59:38 AM
I think the reality is that corporate taxes are not even close to the crux of the issue of why manufacturing is leaving the US.[Edited on May 1, 2012 at 10:12 AM. Reason : derp]
5/1/2012 10:10:21 AM
I'd say those numbers are misleading. politically favored enterprises face a negative tax rate (tax credits exceed tax liability) which means non-politically favored enterprises are paying far more than the 13.4% average you are reporting.
5/1/2012 11:08:23 AM
I think you are probably right, thats a problem that any sensible person would agree needs to be solved.But the overall point still stands, corporate taxes, especially on companies like apple, are NOT the primary reason why they aren't manufacturing in the US.
5/1/2012 11:17:00 AM
5/1/2012 2:15:52 PM
5/11/2012 2:02:49 AM
Good job finding actual income tax numbers instead of both company's hilarious estimates of revenue they generate for the government if you include taxes paid by employees and customers. I'm not being sarcastic either, they can be hard to find espescially for Exxon mobil which puts up quite a few cloned PR pages that tend to float to the top on search results.
5/11/2012 5:32:41 AM
5/11/2012 10:07:48 AM
^ The same use of subsidiary contractors that allows Apple to avoid paying much taxes internationally (in fact that 8 billion I figure I listed was deceptive as the actual taxes paid ws closer to 5 suggesting non-us paid taxes was somewhere around 500 million) compared to what they pay state-side also lets them claim that THEIR foreign workers are well paid and happy. After-all, it's their contractors, subsidiaries and parts suppliers who are working those assembly line personnel to death.
5/11/2012 10:50:03 AM