lurker
Le dullard de la commune
This all started when some ***** decided economics was a science rather than something akin to astrology.
Terry - Somerset":jakg5o3d said:The "USA first" Trump dogma makes the probability of China taking the lead much higher and in fairly swift order.
Global leadership tends to follow those countries which actively embrace relationships with others. For the UK this was based on maritime, technical and scientific skills to create an empire. The US later dominated through manufacturing wealth creation, culture, and military superiority.
Trump has withdrawn from the global arena (WHO membership, climate change denial, Middle East conflict resolution etc) and is intent on creating barriers .
A second Trump term will see the US playing second fiddle to a China which has spent the last three decades building global scale relationships through trade.
Woody2Shoes":3ob3x6pn said:So the Chinese gave us all that stuff (brightly coloured plastic objects, PPE etc etc) and what did we give them in return? Lots of little (electronic) portraits of the Queen/dead presidents. Which of us got the better deal?
Phil Pascoe":33ft623q said:I do find it odd that some people (not here, necessarily) write as if it's only this Country that has huge problems to overcome. It's not - every other Country has them, and our ultimate success will be determined by our overcoming them before others do.
Phil Pascoe":34f7ypmz said:I do find it odd that some people (not here, necessarily) write as if it's only this Country that has huge problems to overcome. It's not - every other Country has them, and our ultimate success will be determined by our overcoming them before others do.
Woody2Shoes":lkyvtjut said:I imagine the thinking that triggered the use of the "emerging economy" phrase was partly based on the fact that Sterling may no longer be considered so "cold" and "hard"! The USD will continue to have value while the Chinese retain such huge stockpiles of it, I suspect!
Phil Pascoe":10aq2obg said:Rorschach - I was thinking more of finances and the future, rather than the direct affects of covid.
billw":1fhjvflp said:The point about squandering our IP and innovativeness is a huge issue. Cheap plastic tat will never be made here again, nor is there any point whatsoever in churning out anything that's inherently mass produced because machines and people can do it in other countries for a lot less.
What Britain needs to do is concentrate on the high value stuff a lot better. Unique craftsmanship is something that can't be replicated easily, sure it can be knocked off on the cheap but that's not the point. We need to concentrate on quality and complexity.
Trainee neophyte":zth2rq17 said:maybe British workers will once again be able to work 16 hours a day in a sweat shop, just like in the good old days of empire.
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