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- Path: sparky!uunet!think.com!cayman!carl
- From: carl@Cayman.COM (Carl Heinzl)
- Newsgroups: rec.autos
- Subject: Re: Politics of car buying(Buying a Japanese car)
- Message-ID: <CARL.93Jan26153758@atlantis.Cayman.COM>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 20:37:58 GMT
- References: <80930@hydra.gatech.EDU> <1993Jan20.221143.9065@oakhill.sps.mot.com>
- <SteveWall-210193171334@hipmac1.pica.army.mil>
- Sender: news@cayman.COM
- Followup-To: rec.autos
- Distribution: na
- Organization: Cayman Systems Inc., Cambridge, MA
- Lines: 46
- Nntp-Posting-Host: atlantis
- In-reply-to: SteveWall@aol.com's message of 21 Jan 93 22:33:47 GMT
- bcc: carl
-
-
- >Everyone seems to be missing a few really basic points in this
- >discussion of our trade imbalance. First: population and
- >productivity. Japan has a comparatively small population and high
- >productivity. USA has a high population and lower productivity. So
-
- First, Japan has approximatly 50% the population of the US. I would
- NOT consider that small!!!
-
- Second, I think that you're pissing into the wind by stating "Japan
- has high productivity." In certain arena they do have higher
- productivity that we do but the converse is also true. They are
- certainly *not* supermen doing the work of 5 people here in the US.
-
- >long as we can't produce all that we want to consume, someone
- >(Japanese or otherwise) is going to have a big trade imbalance with
- >us.
-
- >A second point is about population itself. Even if we and the
- >Japanese do lower all trade barriers (real and imagined) we'll still
- >have a trade imbalance with them. The Japanese market (for cars, or
- >anything) just isn't as big as ours. Couple this with the high
- >housing costs in Japan, which severely limits the disposable income
- >there, and you'll find the market prospects very poor indeed.
-
- Do you know that it costs LESS to buy many Japanese made products HERE
- in the US and ship it back to Japan than it costs to BUY IN JAPAN!!!
-
- >The USA needs to get to work fixing our own problems, not pointing fingers
- >at imaginary bad guys.
-
- We may have problems to take care of here but ALL of the finger
- pointing isn't misplaced.
-
- I have a friend who just arrived back after spending two years in
- Japan. While he was there he bought a pair of shoes (loafers, no big
- deal) - price $160 (US). The stories about apples costing $5 are all
- true (and he says they don't taste anywhere near as good as ours).
-
- So, if we have a level playing ground, perhaps we won't get the whole
- Japanese car market but there is a HUGE Japanese electronic and food
- market that's just waiting for Japan to drop it's protectionist
- attitudes.
-
- -Carl-
- --
-