JREF Homepage Swift Blog Events Calendar $1 Million Paranormal Challenge The Amaz!ng Meeting Useful Links Support Us
James Randi Educational Foundation JREF Forum
Forum Index Register Members List Events Mark Forums Read Help

Go Back   JREF Forum » General Topics » Non-USA & General Politics
Click Here To Donate

Notices


Welcome to the JREF Forum, where we discuss skepticism, critical thinking, the paranormal and science in a friendly but lively way. You are currently viewing the forum as a guest, which means you are missing out on discussing matters that are of interest to you. Please consider registering so you can gain full use of the forum features and interact with other Members. Registration is simple, fast and free! Click here to register today.

Reply
Old 16th May 2012, 08:38 PM   #1
Puppycow
Penultimate Amazing
 
Puppycow's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2003
Location: Japan
Posts: 16,028
We could learn something from the Germans

Germans getting ahead by getting along

Quote:
NUREMBURG, Germany — Underlying Germany’s vaunted manufacturing machine is a system of close collaboration among business, labor and government that has served the nation well in recent years and stands in marked contrast to the increasingly adversarial system in the U.S.

Most factories in Germany are unionized, businesses have labor representatives on their boards, and union demands typically are not sources of tension or hostility with management. On a recent tour of factories here, chief executives professed to value their workers for their institutionalized knowledge and skills.

U.S. companies slashed more than 6 million jobs in a matter of months during the Great Recession in the biggest job bloodletting in a half-century. In Germany, businessmen interviewed here said, they went to great lengths to retain their workers during the steep downturn of 2009.

That led to a remarkable development: German unemployment actually declined during the recession.

“We treat our people well. Then we can demand more,” said Count Anton-Wolfgang von Faber-Castell
Now I've got name envy too.

Quote:
Far from pink-slipping the company’s oldest and most experienced workers during a downturn as many U.S. companies did, Mr. Faber-Castell said, he cultivated them.

Valuing older workers

“I worry that we didn’t keep people long enough,” he said, harking back to the recent early retirement of a key employee in Brazil, which seemed to set back the company’s largest pencil factory there.

“We respect our people. We do not kick old, experienced people out. How do you keep the know-how?” he asked.

Treating workers well has paid dividends for the company, the count said, particularly in the past couple of decades when unions agreed to restrain the growth of wages so Germany could catch up with the global competition and improve productivity. That resulted in a stronger economy for business and workers alike, he said.
And it's not just labor and management getting along, the politicians seem to be better too:

Quote:
“German economic policymaking is more pragmatic than partisan,” he said. German leaders embrace, for example, a combination of spending cuts along with tax hikes to reduce deficits, all the while investing in infrastructure to stimulate jobs and growth — a mixed approach that seems to be anathema in America’s polarized political system.

“U.S. leaders just might learn something from [Germany] about how to run a 21st-century industrial economy in a democracy,” Mr. Gelb said.
__________________
“Some men are born mediocre, some men achieve mediocrity, and some men have mediocrity thrust upon them. With Major Major it had been all three.”
― Joseph Heller, Catch-22
Puppycow is online now   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 16th May 2012, 11:20 PM   #2
Tsukasa Buddha
Other (please write in)
 
Tsukasa Buddha's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: NeverLand
Posts: 10,036
Hm, I wash I could find the study, but the conclusion was that keeping out of labour disputes on the government's side leads to cooperation and increased satisfaction for everyone. For instance, in plenty of places there is no government mandated minimum wage. The unions settle that. Here in the US we have heavy government intervention and arbitration and the unions are decaying with heavy distrust. I would see what it said about Germany, but I can't find it again .

But I know the AFCSME here in Illinois has made similar deals to try to stop layoffs.

Quote:
“German economic policymaking is more pragmatic than partisan,” he said. German leaders embrace, for example, a combination of spending cuts along with tax hikes to reduce deficits, all the while investing in infrastructure to stimulate jobs and growth — a mixed approach that seems to be anathema in America’s polarized political system.
This I think is related to electoral and parliamentary systems, but that is just my bias
__________________
As cultural anthropologists have always said "human culture" = "human nature". You might as well put a fish on the moon to test how it "swims naturally" without the "influence of water". -Earthborn
Tsukasa Buddha is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 17th May 2012, 12:04 AM   #3
The Don
Philosopher
 
The Don's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2002
Location: Cymru
Posts: 8,569
I do a lot of business in Germany and it seems to me that there is a completely different business ethos over there than there is here in the UK or in the US. I get the feeling that for UK/US SMEs, the objective is to grow as quickly as possible and then get out, sell and move on to the next thing. It's a very entrepreneurial approach but it's also quite unstable.

German business seems more about gradual growth, stewardship and stability. The Mittelstand (SMEs) are largely family owned and the emphasis is passing the business onto the next generation. Workers are therefore viewed as valued team members rather than disposable work units.

Overall IMO this means that the German economy won't suddenly grow quickly but then again they can weather economic storms better.

All of the above IMO
The Don is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 17th May 2012, 02:12 AM   #4
Mycroft
High Priest of Ed
 
Mycroft's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 16,149
Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
Now I've got name envy too.
That is undeniably an awesome name.

Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
And it's not just labor and management getting along, the politicians seem to be better too:
So...this all sounds very positive, but how to change American culture to look more like this? It seems like in the USA the relationship between labor and management is designed to be adversarial, and we reward the greedy capitalists who pocket million dollar paychecks for bankrupting a viable company, slashing its pension funds, and putting thousands out of work. (Mitt Romney).
Mycroft is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 02:34 AM   #5
MaGZ
Philosopher
 
MaGZ's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 6,340
It seems the Germans today are going back to National Socialist economic principals of labor and managment working together for the greater good.
MaGZ is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 03:41 AM   #6
Tsukasa Buddha
Other (please write in)
 
Tsukasa Buddha's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: NeverLand
Posts: 10,036
Originally Posted by MaGZ View Post
It seems the Germans today are going back to National Socialist economic principals of labor and managment working together for the greater good.
Yes, when trade unionists were persecuted and people deemed "work shy" were sent to prison. This is clearly the policy at play here .
__________________
As cultural anthropologists have always said "human culture" = "human nature". You might as well put a fish on the moon to test how it "swims naturally" without the "influence of water". -Earthborn
Tsukasa Buddha is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 06:48 AM   #7
Peephole
Master Poster
 
Peephole's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2006
Posts: 2,246
Originally Posted by Puppycow View Post
And it's not just labor and management getting along, the politicians seem to be better too:
No. If German politicians were any good, the Eurozone wouldn't be collapsing right now.
__________________
Peephole is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 06:53 AM   #8
Chaos
TAM Chocolate Dispenser
 
Chaos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: The Heart of Old Europe
Posts: 9,810
Originally Posted by MaGZ View Post
It seems the Germans today are going back to National Socialist economic principals of labor and managment working together for the greater good.
Edited by jhunter1163:  Edited for Rules 0 and 12.
__________________
Grand Master, Knights of the Question Mark
Illusion: too good to be true - Reality: too true to be good
Authors build castles in the sky, readers live in them and publishers collect the rent. - Maxim Gorki
Folks enjoy a witch-hunt as long as they are on the blunt end of the pitchfork. - Suezoled
You can't use logic to talk a man out of a position that he didn't use logic to get himself into - passed down by Nyarlathotep
Kids these days are better than their parents since they constitute the newest edition, the beta version of our societies - Cleopatra
You´ll have to accept the fact that some people are just plain nuts. - Paul C. Anagnostopolous

Last edited by jhunter1163; 18th May 2012 at 02:15 PM.
Chaos is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 08:58 AM   #9
Humes fork
Master Poster
 
Humes fork's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Location: Sweden
Posts: 2,479
We've had similar policies in the Nordic countries as well. Trade unions and representatives for employers negotiate. Actually both sides benefit. Employees get good terms, businesses get stability and predictability. As a result the whole country benefits.
__________________
"Faith is the surrender of the mind; it’s the surrender of reason, it’s the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other mammals. It’s our need to believe, and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. Of all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated." - Christopher Hitchens
Humes fork is online now   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 09:02 AM   #10
Madalch
The Jester
 
Madalch's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: The wet coast.
Posts: 8,750
Quote:
Underlying Germany’s vaunted manufacturing machine is a system of close collaboration among business...
Germans and collaborators always did go hand in hand....
__________________
As the size of an explosion increases, the number of social situations it is incapable of resolving approaches zero. -Vaarsuvius
It's a rum state of affairs when you feel like punching a jar of mayonnaise in the face. -Charlie Brooker
Madalch is online now   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 09:45 AM   #11
Mycroft
High Priest of Ed
 
Mycroft's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 16,149
Originally Posted by MaGZ View Post
It seems the Germans today are going back to National Socialist economic principals of labor and managment working together for the greater good.
The principle you're referring to isn't so much "everybody works together for the common good" so much as it's "let's round up those we think are gonna be dissenters and put them in a camp, then everybody else work together for the common good...until it's time to round up more people."
Mycroft is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 10:15 AM   #12
Corsair 115
Philosopher
 
Corsair 115's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tranquility Base
Posts: 8,684
Originally Posted by Humes fork View Post
We've had similar policies in the Nordic countries as well. Trade unions and representatives for employers negotiate. Actually both sides benefit.

There are examples in the U.S. of such an approach. One such case would be Major League Baseball. For many years it was rife with disputes between the players and owners, with numerous work stoppages due to either strike or lockouts, one of which terminated a season. Both sides figured out that was a counterproductive route. Since then there has been labour peace. Both sides came to realize they need the other in order to make money. They've become partners, and MLB has seen tremendous financial success in the wake of the co-operation.
__________________
"We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Because that goal will serve
to organize and measure the best of our abilities and skills, because that challenge is one we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and
one which we intend to win."
Corsair 115 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 18th May 2012, 11:36 AM   #13
ddt
Mafia Penguin
 
ddt's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Netherlands
Posts: 10,406
Originally Posted by Mycroft View Post
The principle you're referring to isn't so much "everybody works together for the common good" so much as it's "let's round up those we think are gonna be dissenters and put them in a camp, then everybody else work together for the common good...until it's time to round up more people."
No, actually the realization that you could work those Jews, Soviet POWs, political opponents etc. to (near) death before you actually offed them came pretty late, around 1943, when a large part of the eventual victims had already been murdered outright.

I think MaGZ is referring to things like the Arbeitsfront, which was not more than a mock-union designed to give the impression the Nazis did something for the common man, but in reality pandered to the interests of the big corporations and the state.

ETA: forget the "No" at the start, I misread your post.
__________________
Proud member of the Solipsistic Autosycophant's Group

Last edited by ddt; 18th May 2012 at 11:39 AM.
ddt is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 23rd May 2012, 06:01 PM   #14
casebro
Philosopher
 
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 6,885
If the German system is so good compared to the other nations of the world, wouldn't they export lots of stuff? Or be higher on the "Big Mac Standard"? Or some other subjective way to judge the 'betterness' of their system? Ok, labor is happy, management is happy, but does that mean 'better'? How to measure?
__________________
Please pardon me for having ideas, not facts.

Some have called me cynical, but I don't believe them.

It's not how many breaths you take. It's how many times you have been breathless that counts.
casebro is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 23rd May 2012, 08:08 PM   #15
Corsair 115
Philosopher
 
Corsair 115's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tranquility Base
Posts: 8,684
Originally Posted by casebro View Post
If the German system is so good compared to the other nations of the world, wouldn't they export lots of stuff?

Well, for what it's worth, in 2011 Germany exported $98.4 billion worth of goods to the United States. (The U.S. exported $49.1 billion worth of goods to Germany that same year.)
__________________
"We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Because that goal will serve
to organize and measure the best of our abilities and skills, because that challenge is one we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and
one which we intend to win."
Corsair 115 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 23rd May 2012, 08:21 PM   #16
Tsukasa Buddha
Other (please write in)
 
Tsukasa Buddha's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2006
Location: NeverLand
Posts: 10,036
I've actually just came across some info on this in my readings but happenstance. This practice is called concertation in literature. It can be social corporatism, which favours labour, or liberal corporatism, which favours business.

This is correlated with consensual governance, compared to pluralist interests which correlates with majoritarian governance.
__________________
As cultural anthropologists have always said "human culture" = "human nature". You might as well put a fish on the moon to test how it "swims naturally" without the "influence of water". -Earthborn
Tsukasa Buddha is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 23rd May 2012, 10:40 PM   #17
Craig B
Illuminator
 
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 4,332
Originally Posted by MaGZ View Post
It seems the Germans today are going back to National Socialist economic principals of labor and managment working together for the greater good.
The same principles which animated the destruction of trade unions in 1933, and later the horrors of the slave labour camps. Anyway it turns out that the "greater good" was creating a huge military machine and using it in an attempt to conquer and plunder Europe.

Fortunately the present German government doesn't seem inclined to go back to these economic principles.
Craig B is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 04:58 AM   #18
Childlike Empress
Ewige Blumenkraft
 
Childlike Empress's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 8,056
Originally Posted by casebro View Post
If the German system is so good compared to the other nations of the world, wouldn't they export lots of stuff?

Actually, from 2003-2008 Germany was the largest export nation in the world. In total. Before that it was on place two behind the US for many years, and since 2009 China takes the lead, followed by the US and Germany about on par.
__________________
Breaking The Set
Childlike Empress is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 05:01 AM   #19
WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
 
WildCat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany Park, Chicago
Posts: 49,471
Originally Posted by Corsair 115 View Post
Well, for what it's worth, in 2011 Germany exported $98.4 billion worth of goods to the United States. (The U.S. exported $49.1 billion worth of goods to Germany that same year.)
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.
WildCat is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 05:12 AM   #20
Childlike Empress
Ewige Blumenkraft
 
Childlike Empress's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 8,056
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.

__________________
Breaking The Set
Childlike Empress is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 05:41 AM   #21
stokes234
Master Poster
 
stokes234's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2010
Location: UK
Posts: 2,295
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.
That doesn't sound right. If germany are exporting about twice as much as they are importing from america despite having a quarter of the population, then germans are about 8 times better per person at making things americans want than americans are at making things germans want.
__________________
"I offer the world my genius. All I ask in return is that the world cover my expenses." Hugo Rune
stokes234 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 11:33 AM   #22
Corsair 115
Philosopher
 
Corsair 115's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tranquility Base
Posts: 8,684
I posted the German export figures to the U.S. because I knew where to easily find the foreign trade data for the U.S.

According to Wikipedia (which in turn cites the Federal Statistics Office of Germany), in 2011 Germany exported €1.288 trillion, of which 6.8% went to the U.S.
__________________
"We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Because that goal will serve
to organize and measure the best of our abilities and skills, because that challenge is one we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and
one which we intend to win."
Corsair 115 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 12:22 PM   #23
Childlike Empress
Ewige Blumenkraft
 
Childlike Empress's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 8,056
Originally Posted by Corsair 115 View Post
I posted the German export figures to the U.S. because I knew where to easily find the foreign trade data for the U.S.

According to Wikipedia (which in turn cites the Federal Statistics Office of Germany), in 2011 Germany exported €1.288 trillion, of which 6.8% went to the U.S.

See my link, WTO numbers. I didn't find an equivalent on the English language wikipedia but it should be clear what that table shows (top three exporters over the years) and what countries like "Kanada" are. "BR Deutschland" means West-Germany up until the Reunification. 2011 numbers I think are still estimates.
__________________
Breaking The Set

Last edited by Childlike Empress; 24th May 2012 at 12:26 PM.
Childlike Empress is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 12:33 PM   #24
Childlike Empress
Ewige Blumenkraft
 
Childlike Empress's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Ivory Tower
Posts: 8,056
Meant to post this already, but didn't for reasons mentioned in this article I think might be interesting to some reading this thread: "Germany is the most grown-up country in the world today"
__________________
Breaking The Set
Childlike Empress is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 01:00 PM   #25
funk de fino
Dreaming of unicorns
 
funk de fino's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Alba
Posts: 10,813
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.
Oh my good god.............
__________________


Stundie - Avoided like the plaque, its a scottish turn of phrase.
Christopher 7 - There is no need to contact them for conformation. That is just a denial tactic
funk de fino is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 24th May 2012, 06:33 PM   #26
MaGZ
Philosopher
 
MaGZ's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jan 2007
Posts: 6,340
Originally Posted by Craig B View Post
The same principles which animated the destruction of trade unions in 1933, and later the horrors of the slave labour camps. Anyway it turns out that the "greater good" was creating a huge military machine and using it in an attempt to conquer and plunder Europe.

Fortunately the present German government doesn't seem inclined to go back to these economic principles.
“Slave labour camps”
Do you mean how prisoners have to work in prison factories to make things like they do in the US?
MaGZ is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 25th May 2012, 05:07 AM   #27
Chaos
TAM Chocolate Dispenser
 
Chaos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: The Heart of Old Europe
Posts: 9,810
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.
Since the US population is 3.8 Germany´s population, shouldn´t you expect the US´s exports to Germany to be closer to $375 billion than $50 billion?
__________________
Grand Master, Knights of the Question Mark
Illusion: too good to be true - Reality: too true to be good
Authors build castles in the sky, readers live in them and publishers collect the rent. - Maxim Gorki
Folks enjoy a witch-hunt as long as they are on the blunt end of the pitchfork. - Suezoled
You can't use logic to talk a man out of a position that he didn't use logic to get himself into - passed down by Nyarlathotep
Kids these days are better than their parents since they constitute the newest edition, the beta version of our societies - Cleopatra
You´ll have to accept the fact that some people are just plain nuts. - Paul C. Anagnostopolous
Chaos is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 25th May 2012, 08:25 AM   #28
Craig B
Illuminator
 
Join Date: May 2011
Posts: 4,332
Originally Posted by MaGZ View Post
“Slave labour camps”
Do you mean how prisoners have to work in prison factories to make things like they do in the US?
Not unless new arrivals unable to work are promptly murdered, while the others are worked to death in a few months.

If I was a US citizen, even given the deplorable character of the US penal system, I would take the very strongest exception to your absurd post. Can you possibly be writing seriously, or are you simply setting down the first things that happen to enter your head?
Craig B is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 25th May 2012, 08:39 PM   #29
WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
 
WildCat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany Park, Chicago
Posts: 49,471
Originally Posted by Childlike Empress View Post
Don't facepalm me, I didn't come up with that metric.
WildCat is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 25th May 2012, 08:42 PM   #30
WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
 
WildCat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany Park, Chicago
Posts: 49,471
Originally Posted by Chaos View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 Germany´s population, shouldn´t you expect the US´s exports to Germany to be closer to $375 billion than $50 billion?
Quite the opposite. Much smaller market, thus less potential.
WildCat is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 12:08 AM   #31
Francesca R
Girl
 
Francesca R's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London EC1
Posts: 11,829
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 times Germany's population, you'd expect (all other things being equal) that Germany's exports to the US would be closer to $185 billion.
What? The relative size of Germany vs the US has zero implication for what the bilateral merchandise trade balance should be.
Francesca R is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 12:09 AM   #32
Francesca R
Girl
 
Francesca R's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London EC1
Posts: 11,829
Originally Posted by stokes234 View Post
If germany are exporting about twice as much as they are importing from america despite having a quarter of the population, then germans are about 8 times better per person at making things americans want than americans are at making things germans want.
That's an incorrect inference as well. The relative size of the countries is irrelevant.
Francesca R is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 01:41 AM   #33
Francesca R
Girl
 
Francesca R's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London EC1
Posts: 11,829
Originally Posted by Chaos View Post
Since the US population is 3.8 Germany´s population, shouldn´t you expect the US´s exports to Germany to be closer to $375 billion than $50 billion?
And again, irrelevant.

I can run a one-woman business and have a German client who pays me Ł25,000 per year in fees. As long as I don't buy stuff from German suppliers / supply chains worth that amount, then I've got a "net export surplus" with Germany, yet there's only one me and 81,700,000 of them. Does that mean I'm 80 million times better at making stuff the Germans want than they are at making things I want? Doesn't mean very much.
Francesca R is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 01:50 AM   #34
Francesca R
Girl
 
Francesca R's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London EC1
Posts: 11,829
60% of Germany's exports are bought by the rest of the EU. There is general agreement that this reflects the uncompetitiveness of the other Euro-zone members which has grown larger over time as they have experienced higher factor cost increases (mostly labour) with no FX rate flexibility. Without the euro, Germany's currency would have appreciated to compensate for this.

Therefore to a large extent, Germany is deriving benefit via its trade balance from the same causes that are stressing out most of southern Europe. (It is also of course deriviing further benefit via a much lower cost of capital than it would otherwise have as investors avoid other EMU markets).

This is why many in the zone (except Germans of course) believe that Germany has a moral obligation to contribute more to solve the EMU crisis.
Francesca R is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 03:31 AM   #35
Chaos
TAM Chocolate Dispenser
 
Chaos's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: The Heart of Old Europe
Posts: 9,810
Originally Posted by Francesca R View Post
And again, irrelevant.
I wasn´t being serious, I was just turning Wildcat´s BS around against him.
__________________
Grand Master, Knights of the Question Mark
Illusion: too good to be true - Reality: too true to be good
Authors build castles in the sky, readers live in them and publishers collect the rent. - Maxim Gorki
Folks enjoy a witch-hunt as long as they are on the blunt end of the pitchfork. - Suezoled
You can't use logic to talk a man out of a position that he didn't use logic to get himself into - passed down by Nyarlathotep
Kids these days are better than their parents since they constitute the newest edition, the beta version of our societies - Cleopatra
You´ll have to accept the fact that some people are just plain nuts. - Paul C. Anagnostopolous
Chaos is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 04:21 AM   #36
psionl0
Illuminator
 
psionl0's Avatar
 
Join Date: Sep 2010
Location: 31°58'S 115°57'E
Posts: 4,897
The main thing to learn from Germany is that countries that produce real goods and services tend to have more stable economies than those countries where everybody wants to play "banker".
psionl0 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 06:49 AM   #37
WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
 
WildCat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany Park, Chicago
Posts: 49,471
Originally Posted by Francesca R View Post
What? The relative size of Germany vs the US has zero implication for what the bilateral merchandise trade balance should be.
Really? How about Liechtenstein? Does size matter then?

It's a stupid metric, trade imbalance between any 2 natons is not a reflection of any particular labor policy you pick. If it was related to labor policy (as Corsair implied) then everyone should follow China's model.
WildCat is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 07:04 AM   #38
Francesca R
Girl
 
Francesca R's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: London EC1
Posts: 11,829
It (the trade balance) is a measure of the relative competitiveness of goods and services. Competitiveness does not just reflect labour policy, but that is an influence.
Francesca R is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 07:13 AM   #39
WildCat
NWO Master Conspirator
 
WildCat's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2003
Location: Albany Park, Chicago
Posts: 49,471
Originally Posted by Francesca R View Post
It (the trade balance) is a measure of the relative competitiveness of goods and services. Competitiveness does not just reflect labour policy, but that is an influence.
Exactly, it's just one ingredient in a complex stew.

Japanese companies have a similar labor-management model, yet Japan has been stuck in a 20+ year quagmire.
WildCat is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Old 26th May 2012, 10:47 AM   #40
Corsair 115
Philosopher
 
Corsair 115's Avatar
 
Join Date: Apr 2007
Location: Tranquility Base
Posts: 8,684
Originally Posted by WildCat View Post
If it was related to labor policy (as Corsair implied) then everyone should follow China's model.

I never made any such implication. My offering of the German export figures was in response to casebro's comment in post #14 that if the German's system was so good then it ought to export a lot of stuff. The intent was to show that Germany does indeed export a lot of stuff. Whether that's due specifically to Germany's labour system or other factors was not a consideration in my post; I'll leave that analysis to those more well-versed in such matters.
__________________
"We choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things not because they are easy, but because they are hard. Because that goal will serve
to organize and measure the best of our abilities and skills, because that challenge is one we are willing to accept, one we are unwilling to postpone, and
one which we intend to win."

Last edited by Corsair 115; 26th May 2012 at 10:49 AM.
Corsair 115 is offline   Quote this post in a PM   Nominate this post for this month's language award Copy a direct link to this post Reply With Quote Back to Top
Reply

JREF Forum » General Topics » Non-USA & General Politics

Bookmarks

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 04:27 PM.
Powered by vBulletin. Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
© 2001-2012, James Randi Educational Foundation. All Rights Reserved.

Disclaimer: Messages posted in the Forum are solely the opinion of their authors.