4/4/2005 2:24:56 PM
4/4/2005 2:25:22 PM
4/4/2005 2:25:57 PM
4/4/2005 2:26:27 PM
4/4/2005 2:26:53 PM
4/4/2005 2:28:22 PM
4/4/2005 2:34:04 PM
governments such as japan give tax reductions to select areas of businesses in hopes of market dominance.
4/4/2005 2:39:52 PM
Biotech Research in Singapore is a 100% tax-exempt and "SOP-offered" thing.They even allow like 100% foreign equity into companies.Regulated economies like India, on the other hand barely allow more than 50% foreign ownership.
4/4/2005 2:41:36 PM
I'd like to know exactly how much is owned in America by saudis. I bet it is a lot.
4/4/2005 2:46:55 PM
A lot compared to what?
4/4/2005 4:17:57 PM
haha, i would say china's ownership of our trade deficit is a little more concerning
4/4/2005 4:37:21 PM
dude, that is loooooongwill read after i graduate...j/k
4/4/2005 7:03:24 PM
well, you can theoretically control trade deficits.
4/4/2005 7:30:06 PM
I'm going to start buying chinese money
4/4/2005 7:32:08 PM
China is a trade behemoth created by the United States to counter Russian dominance in the 70s and 80s.
4/4/2005 7:34:21 PM
and Mao?
4/4/2005 7:41:41 PM
summarize plz
4/4/2005 8:24:06 PM
The world is smallerglobalization is coming, grab your ankles
4/4/2005 8:24:57 PM
bah. The column is just stirring up the old threat of America's "declining competiveness". That's just bullshit. Trade isn't about competitiveness and America being less productive than India wont mean shit for our standard of living. Friedman would have gotten better answers if he asked ECONOMISTS than special interest groups or businessmen.Here are some better articles from my boyfriend Paul Krugman. (1) http://www.pkarchive.org/global/pop.html(2) http://www.pkarchive.org/trade/CompetitivenessDoesItMatter.htmlHere's an excerpt from (2):
4/5/2005 12:27:39 AM
not a big fan of krugman but that has to be the sainest thing ive heard out of him yet...^
4/5/2005 3:16:59 AM
4/5/2005 8:40:30 AM
Because the floating exchange rate filters everything out. If you are not competitive in any industry, then the exchange rate will change in your favor to MAKE you competitive in sufficient industries to balance the books. If country A has double the productivity of country B, yet have an equal exchange rate (1/1), then country B will begin importing goods from country A exclusively. In effect, country B is importing goods and exporting dollars. After a short while, assuming country B inflates its money supply to prevent deflation, B's currency begins to build up in currency markets and falls. When the exchange rate is 1/2, then the relative price levels between the two countries have become equal and thus both are competitive.
4/5/2005 9:44:47 AM
but i guess where this guy is taking the idea, (or maybe i presupposed too much), is what happens wayyy down the line, when there's no such thing as an exchange rate anymore, and its an outmoded protectionist idea to have a currency specific to ones own country?
4/5/2005 10:03:54 AM
You mean like the various states in the United States? In a sense, we have a fixed exchange rate. So what happens to us is deflation and inflation.If North Carolina has twice the productivity of South Carolina, and a fixed exchange rate, then the correction is more painful. South Carolinians buy North Carolina's goods, but not vice versa. In effect, South Carolina is importing goods and exporting dollars. With no central bank to inflate South Carolina's money supply dollars become scarce and thus more valuable, prices begin to fall. Conversely, North Carolina is awash in cash, prices begin to rise. Eventually, when the relative price ratio is 2/1, cross border trade equalizes because South Carolinians goods are too cheap to ignore, and North Carolinian goods are too expensive to afford. The question is: Are they better off using the same currency or a floating exchange rate? Inflation and Deflation can be very disruptive to the local economy, meanwhile a floating exchange rate increases transation costs. I suspect it depends on the relative size of the economies in question. If one is drastically larger than the other then a common currency is best because for the small country far more of its economy will be international. Meanwhile, two large countries would most likely suffer far more harm to their local economies than the benefits to their relatively smaller trade volumes.
4/5/2005 11:08:47 AM
i guess i should have taken more than just ec 202, or whatever it was.thats interesting
4/5/2005 11:16:21 AM
this guy was on the daily show
4/5/2005 11:21:59 PM
4/6/2005 1:45:52 AM
I fully support Smoker4 on this treatise of sentiment he has published above. If only more people realized this, Thomas L. Friendman would be forced to get a real job selling life insurance.
4/6/2005 11:45:17 AM
4/6/2005 1:03:07 PM
In the game of being right, every man keeps his own score. *shrug*
4/6/2005 1:26:25 PM
i finally read all this, and generally I am a huge Friedman fan. some of the alarmist things he says in this piece are a bit over the top, but over all he's right. this is not going to wreck our standard of living, but it does call for our losing the sense of "entitlement".its difficult given the lack of Asian history we study, but this has to be put into perspective. momentum is the most powerful force in the universe (paraphrasing Einstein). China and India lost their momentum a while ago, and are just now getting it back. not too long ago, crusades were being fought to trade with them. it seems that the efficiencies they gained in public policy, spirituality, overall level of civility, combined with lack of will and/or ability to incorporate gunpowder into weaponry contributed greatly to that loss of momentum. for China the overdependence on test-based meritocracy, and for India the overdependence on conserved social norms, contributed to the down cycle as well. the two sleeping giants were coming back at their own pace, but the information age accelerated this process. its not that America's standard of living will decline, its just that the other two's will finally come up to par as the pie increases. materially, this Indo-chinese rise to affluency will be reflected (and be measurable) in the near term in currencies, as well as in firm valuations and higher M&A deal values.[Edited on April 6, 2005 at 2:03 PM. Reason : asdfsdfgdfgdfsg]
4/6/2005 2:01:47 PM
4/6/2005 2:17:38 PM
Where the hell has Najeeb been lately anyway?
4/6/2005 3:20:42 PM
ssjamind has received his Platinum Hero Express card.
4/6/2005 4:30:23 PM
A guy was on the daily show talking about this.Good news source
4/7/2005 12:08:47 AM
He was on Charlie Rose last night. Very interesting.
4/7/2005 12:14:39 AM
4/7/2005 12:16:07 AM
i'm being given this book as a gift
7/5/2005 4:47:38 PM
If only this country wasn't handicapped by a leadership, democrat and republican, thats so far out of touch with global reality that the only people they can relate to are either hippies are fundamentalists.There's still a lot of research and innovation going on here despite the media and government.
7/6/2005 9:11:36 AM
I'm reading that book right now.
7/6/2005 9:41:50 AM
so we try to spread capitalism and our way of life all over the world, and when we get too much competition, someone has to write a long article talking about how other countries are taking our jerbs.
7/6/2005 9:55:10 AM
I don't think I like Friedman anymore
7/6/2005 10:17:40 AM
I never liked fried man.
7/6/2005 11:18:42 AM
did anyone catch Friedman over the last weekend on CSPAN at the NGA conference?He basically gave you the cliff notes to the book...i thought it was a pretty good speechGlobalization v3.0 here we come
7/20/2005 9:15:03 AM
And I quote:"The Times columnist does foreign policy punditry by cliche"
7/20/2005 10:24:15 AM
^ except when he prophesized 9/11 in "The Lexus and the Olive Tree"
7/20/2005 1:20:35 PM
His daughter is in India being a teacher.I used to like his readings.But the quality has been going down.There is no such thing as Globalization ver 3.0It was all there in Globalization ver 1.0, but lamers didn't notice.[Edited on July 20, 2005 at 1:22 PM. Reason : .]
7/20/2005 1:22:39 PM
7/20/2005 1:30:36 PM
ahahahahahaand yes, i watch CSPAN on the weekends....when im at the beach....
7/20/2005 1:47:35 PM