Winner
Diverse in Unity
^
| As the debt ceiling farce unfolds, perhaps someone should ask this question.
What I mean is this: the US is running a huge trade deficit with China, but it is also running deficits with the European Union, Japan, and probably other smaller developed economies.
This indicates that its manufacturing sector as a whole isn't competitive. Simply put, the US products aren't competing well on world markets, thus the exports stagnate, while the imports soar.
I keep hearing that it doesn't matter, because the US is a "service economy". But what does that mean? As I understand it, a service economy is an economy where most people make livelihoods by selling services to people who can pay for them - which means people who have earned them in the other sectors of the economy. This way, money is spread across the society. But what if there simply isn't enough people with money to buy these services? It can hardly function as a perpetual motion machine, the money needs to come from somewhere. Currently, as I see it, the money is coming from abroad due to the well-known and discussed-to-death effect of the dollar being the world's pre-eminent reserve/transaction currency.
Just yesterday I read how it works with China. China earns a lot of dollars from its trade with the US. It needs to put the dollars somewhere, and so far it has seen the US treasuries as a safe bet, so in essence it kept lending the US government the same money it earned from selling Chinese manufactured goods to Americans. So, the money stays in the US so the "service economy" can "function".
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The problem with this is that it looks awfully like what happened in southern Europe. Germany is Europe's "China" - it is big, it produces a lot of stuff and it exports most of this stuff at competitive prices. Countries like Greece - "service economies" until recently - kept importing manufactured goods from Germany, but their own manufacturing sectors were not competitive so they couldn't offer much "in return". To make up for it, they borrowed the money they needed from German banks (among others) and the cycle repeated itself.
Well, we know what it led to - Greece went bankrupt (for all intents and purposes) when people realized it's economy isn't going anywhere, and other countries whose manufacturing sectors aren't competitive against other EU countries may follow.
Does that ring a bell?
---
Now, can somebody please tell me how the US plans to avoid the same fate, considering that
a) its political system is dysfunctional;
b) the two parties can't agree on where the Sun rises, much less on how to reform the health care, pension and welfare system, how to reduce the military budget, how to collect taxes from the rich, how to make American industries competitive again, how to deal with environmental issues, etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.;
c) the Americans have this ridiculous notion that they're somehow unique, exceptional, so that the rules that govern other countries don't really apply to them;
d) the Americans as a people are addicted to a lifestyle their economy is unable to afford without solving all the problems I mentioned, and they're looking for a quick fix rather than complex solutions (hence Tea Party);
e) when someone comes up with a plan (perhaps not the best one, but at least something), like Obama, he's shouted down by a coalition of populist politicians funded by the super-rich who don't want to pay taxes, insane media (like Fox, also controlled by people who are averse to any progressive change), and a collection of "experts" who are about as independent, honest, and impartial as Kim Jong-il.
---
So, if anyone has some good answers to my questions, please go ahead and tell me what I've missed/am missing
| As the debt ceiling farce unfolds, perhaps someone should ask this question.
What I mean is this: the US is running a huge trade deficit with China, but it is also running deficits with the European Union, Japan, and probably other smaller developed economies.


This indicates that its manufacturing sector as a whole isn't competitive. Simply put, the US products aren't competing well on world markets, thus the exports stagnate, while the imports soar.
I keep hearing that it doesn't matter, because the US is a "service economy". But what does that mean? As I understand it, a service economy is an economy where most people make livelihoods by selling services to people who can pay for them - which means people who have earned them in the other sectors of the economy. This way, money is spread across the society. But what if there simply isn't enough people with money to buy these services? It can hardly function as a perpetual motion machine, the money needs to come from somewhere. Currently, as I see it, the money is coming from abroad due to the well-known and discussed-to-death effect of the dollar being the world's pre-eminent reserve/transaction currency.
Just yesterday I read how it works with China. China earns a lot of dollars from its trade with the US. It needs to put the dollars somewhere, and so far it has seen the US treasuries as a safe bet, so in essence it kept lending the US government the same money it earned from selling Chinese manufactured goods to Americans. So, the money stays in the US so the "service economy" can "function".
---
The problem with this is that it looks awfully like what happened in southern Europe. Germany is Europe's "China" - it is big, it produces a lot of stuff and it exports most of this stuff at competitive prices. Countries like Greece - "service economies" until recently - kept importing manufactured goods from Germany, but their own manufacturing sectors were not competitive so they couldn't offer much "in return". To make up for it, they borrowed the money they needed from German banks (among others) and the cycle repeated itself.
Well, we know what it led to - Greece went bankrupt (for all intents and purposes) when people realized it's economy isn't going anywhere, and other countries whose manufacturing sectors aren't competitive against other EU countries may follow.
Does that ring a bell?
---
Now, can somebody please tell me how the US plans to avoid the same fate, considering that
a) its political system is dysfunctional;
b) the two parties can't agree on where the Sun rises, much less on how to reform the health care, pension and welfare system, how to reduce the military budget, how to collect taxes from the rich, how to make American industries competitive again, how to deal with environmental issues, etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.;
c) the Americans have this ridiculous notion that they're somehow unique, exceptional, so that the rules that govern other countries don't really apply to them;
d) the Americans as a people are addicted to a lifestyle their economy is unable to afford without solving all the problems I mentioned, and they're looking for a quick fix rather than complex solutions (hence Tea Party);
e) when someone comes up with a plan (perhaps not the best one, but at least something), like Obama, he's shouted down by a coalition of populist politicians funded by the super-rich who don't want to pay taxes, insane media (like Fox, also controlled by people who are averse to any progressive change), and a collection of "experts" who are about as independent, honest, and impartial as Kim Jong-il.
---
So, if anyone has some good answers to my questions, please go ahead and tell me what I've missed/am missing
