It's time to ask why can't you buy British made products and be proud of your heritage> We all know why - there'll always be a Country somewhere that'll make it way cheaper, and most people aren't remotely interested where something's made.
Most people forget we do still make a lot of stuff here, but it's generally stuff that's complex and highly skilled, not whacking some aluminium in a mould and drilling a couple of holes in it.
Stuff we do, as the NINTH largest manufacturing economy* in the world.....
Aerospace - aircraft engines and components
Chemical and pharmaceutical - huge R&D sector, but we actually make the stuff too and export £45bn of it
Defence - 140,000 people in a field that the west will never allow China to be involved in
Electronics - 14 of the world’s top 20 semiconductor companies have design/manufacturing sites in the UK
Nuclear - 63,000 direct jobs
Security - equipment supporting national infrastructure; cyber security; policing and counter-terrorism
Space - supports telecoms and broadcasting to enable disaster relief, telemedicine, navigation
Right - most of that stuff is complex and requires innovation and highly technically skilled people, both in design and manufacture. What's more productive for our economy? Employing less people in higher value operations, or employing lots of people to churn out plastic toothbrush holders, aluminium step ladders, or even iphones!
The best thing our country can do is ask "where can we add the most value?" and if somewhere else can do things to a required standard at a much cheaper price, outsource it to them and let our people continue to generate a higher GDP per capita by investing in quality education and encouraging investment in the country by firms looking for the best, not cheapest, workforce.
Next time you manage to fly somewhere, sit near the wing and look out of the window. How would you feel if the engine had "made in China" on it? Let's make the stuff that can't be replicated easily in Guangzhou.
*A fact, but disguises that even in 9th place our global share is a mere 1.8%.