MeisterEckhart wrote on Jun 6
th, 2024 at 7:33pm:
Laugh till you cry wrote on Jun 6
th, 2024 at 7:30pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Jun 6
th, 2024 at 7:25pm:
aquascoot wrote on Jun 6
th, 2024 at 6:15pm:
MeisterEckhart wrote on Jun 6
th, 2024 at 12:28pm:
There is an anticipated supply chain problem due to the imminent US tariffs on Chinese imports, forcing Chinese exporters to ramp up shipments to the US before the tariffs come into effect, at the cost of shipping to other countries such as Australia.
what are you doing on this forum meister?
youre way too smart and logical for these chodes
are you , like myself, hoping to throw down ropes and help the chode ascend the narrow road to success?
they wont climb
people have their emotional set points and to give up complaining and think for themselves (personal responsibility) would tip them out of homeostasis
It's an omen of times to come, and a warning call to Australia to ramp up local manufacturing, even at the risk of higher costs at checkout.
The days of sucking off the tits of countries that provide us with dirt-cheap goods via slave and forced labour are over.
The only things Australians are good at manufacturing internationally competitively are holes in the ground, fantasies, and excuses.
Aquascoot and MeisterEckhart are examples of failures.
You missed the point again. This is about local manufacturing for local consumption.
Political forums aren't your thing... Stick to TikTok.
Bricks? Even bricks face rising imports.
In the 1920s an economic committee considered the issue of whether Australia should support local manufacture using tariffs. The committee decided that local manufacture should be supported. However in the long run it petered out in the 1980s coincident with a time when the A$1 = US$ 1.25
The rise of the Australian dollar made local manufacture uncompetitive and that is still the case. Local manufacturing with consequent reduction of imports causes A$ to rise because trade balance is strongly positive even without local manufacture.
Its a sad fact that success in resources and agriculture mitigates against success in manufacturing.
"What construction materials does Australia import?
China alone provides 60 per cent of Australia's annual $6 billion worth of construction materials, which in turn account for approximately 20 percent of the total cost of a single construction. Consequently, measures to stem the virus resulted in a shortage of construction materials such as timber, windows and steel."