Re: A Tale of Two Economies...
GRG55 that's an excellent point.
I think that the problem is smaller than it might appear.
You are in the petroleum business, and petroleum might be the poster child for manufacturing plant and equipment that is nearly inflexible.
An oil refinery cannot be retooled to do anything else. It makes petroleum products or it's idle scrap iron.
Other industries are more easily converted.
I suppose the poster child for that might be the 1940's automotive plants that quickly morphed into WWII plants making bombers and tanks.
I think much of the industry in China is pretty flexible, and can be redirected without too much trouble.
Plants making one electronic device can make others pretty easily. Empty circuit boards are much alike, and surface mount pick-and-place machinery can stuff any components into any board.
Plants engaged in light industry and mechanical assembly can punch out or extrude different pieces and assemble different products.
Plastic injection molding plants can make a totally different shape by just swapping the core and cavity tools..
Today it's barbie dolls and earbud pieces, next month it could be totally different shapes that Chinese people want.
The kind of basic, no-frills, low-cost manufacturing that moved to China is the most easily adapted, general-purpose manufacturing there is.
It's the highly specialized, world-scale plant type of manufacturing that is impractical to redirect. Giant chemical plants. Chip fabs and silicon foundries.
From time to time I look at a cell phone or toy helicopter and think how easy it would be for China to redirect that manufacturing capacity into missile seeker heads.
If China wanted to turn its spare manufacturing capacity towards making simple things they want for themselves, it should be pretty easy.
Originally posted by GRG55
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I think that the problem is smaller than it might appear.
You are in the petroleum business, and petroleum might be the poster child for manufacturing plant and equipment that is nearly inflexible.
An oil refinery cannot be retooled to do anything else. It makes petroleum products or it's idle scrap iron.
Other industries are more easily converted.
I suppose the poster child for that might be the 1940's automotive plants that quickly morphed into WWII plants making bombers and tanks.
I think much of the industry in China is pretty flexible, and can be redirected without too much trouble.
Plants making one electronic device can make others pretty easily. Empty circuit boards are much alike, and surface mount pick-and-place machinery can stuff any components into any board.
Plants engaged in light industry and mechanical assembly can punch out or extrude different pieces and assemble different products.
Plastic injection molding plants can make a totally different shape by just swapping the core and cavity tools..
Today it's barbie dolls and earbud pieces, next month it could be totally different shapes that Chinese people want.
The kind of basic, no-frills, low-cost manufacturing that moved to China is the most easily adapted, general-purpose manufacturing there is.
It's the highly specialized, world-scale plant type of manufacturing that is impractical to redirect. Giant chemical plants. Chip fabs and silicon foundries.
From time to time I look at a cell phone or toy helicopter and think how easy it would be for China to redirect that manufacturing capacity into missile seeker heads.
If China wanted to turn its spare manufacturing capacity towards making simple things they want for themselves, it should be pretty easy.
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