Category:

Global Trade

Craziest Thing I Ever Heard: Is This America?

http://www.schoolforstartups.com/craziest-thing-i-ever-heard-is-this-america/

Well, this is certainly a crazy time in the US. With the election soon, and all the craziness thus ensuing, there are countless examples of how America has lost its way.

Typical America

I have never been more in shock at the stupid, silly things you hear every day. But this beats them all!

The US Supreme Court has a case before it now that I bet you have not heard about. On October 29th, the court will hear the case Kirtsaeng v. John Wiley & Sons. In 1997, Supap Kirtsaeng studied at Cornell University, and was shocked to learn that textbooks were much cheaper in his native Thailand. So, being a great entrepreneur, he called home, had his family buys tons of books which he sold on eBay, pocketing $1.2 million in profit. Textbook publishers sued, saying he was violating copyrights. They won.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (New York, Connecticut, and Vermont) upheld a lower court’s ruling that anything that was manufactured overseas does not qualify for the first-sale principle. This 1908 idea says that you can resell your cars, cameras, watches, or anything else without worry because the original copyright holder only had control over the first sale. If you buy a Mercedes car, the new ruling requires that you get permission from Mercedes to sell your 12 year old car. Think they will charge for it? Got some jewelry from your Italian great, great grandmother? You can’t sell it without permission!

The Supreme Court may slap this down, but seeing some of their other decisions, who knows! It is very likely that in November, you will learn it is illegal to sell your 200 year old French clock! Imagine the impact on eBay or Craigslist.

America is dying. Ask Washington, Lincoln, Roosevelt (both of them!) if they could sell their imported English items, and I am pretty sure (ok 100000% sure) that Jefferson et al would laugh at the question. This is the slippery slope. He hear that one court decision only leads to more decisions that take away our rights! And now we see it in effect.

Great Webinar Series on China

http://www.schoolforstartups.com/great-webinar-series-on-china/

free web event this thursday….. October 27th,2011, 9:00 AM EST

Managing Conflict in China – Avoiding, Managing, and Minimizing

http://www.chinabusinesswebinars.com/events/7/webinar-managing-conflict-in-china-avoiding-managing-and-minimizing/

Shipping Jobs Overseas

http://www.schoolforstartups.com/shipping-jobs-overseas/

As we move closer to the November elections here in the USA, we’ll be hearing more and more politicians tell how they are going to start punishing companies that ship jobs overseas.  It sounds so nice and so American.  We want to keep jobs here instead of having people in India, China, or elsewhere do “our” jobs.

If you are patiently waiting for your job to come back to the USA based upon the promises of a politician, you are wasting your time.  In fact, your job won’t come back to the USA.  In a global economy, they were never “our” jobs to begin with.  You would be better off learning a new skill, or taking what we teach here at The Entrepreneur School, and starting your own business.

Under capitalism, there is an idea called creative destruction.  This idea applies to technological changes that can completely wipe out certain industries.  Also, a competitor could come in with a better & cheaper product, and completely take your market share.  That’s just the reality of the system.  It’s a system based on change.  Those who don’t change or adapt new skills lose their jobs.  Companies that don’t change or adapt go bankrupt.  It’s harsh, but the opposite is a controlled system where supply is dictated by the government as opposed to demand.  That hasn’t worked out very well in the countries that have tried it.

If your competitor has a way to make their product cheaper, they can begin charging less for their product.  If you don’t follow suit, you will be out of business.  And in a global economy, your competitor is not just another USA company.  You are competing against every company in the world in your industry.

The debate about outsourcing and jobs moving overseas is one of simple economics.  In fact, each of us as consumers act in a similar manner every time we walk into a store.  If there are two similar products and one is $10 more than the other, most of us will choose the cheaper product.  The same applies for companies.  There are a number of inputs that determine the final price of a product.  If one of those inputs is $10 cheaper in another country, the company will choose the cheaper input.  And as noted above, if they don’t choose the cheaper input, someone else will.

If a product is labor intensive, like the production of a t-shirt, that simply means that labor will be one of the most costly parts of the product.  If a USA worker makes $7+ an hour and a East Asian worker makes $0.50 an hour, who do you think the company will choose?  The company has to recoup that labor cost in the price they charge for the t-shirt.  If competitors from the USA and other countries are selling t-shirts for $15 and you are making your shirts in the USA, your cost of production is likely more than $15 for each shirt.  You simply can’t sell a t-shirt for less than the cost of the production and hope to stay in business.

So, your choice becomes this – do we move the labor intensive jobs overseas in order to keep the company in business or do we keep producing in the USA until we run out of money?  This would be a pretty simple, yet heart-wrenching decision for the majority of business leaders.  Many people will lose their job as a result of the decision, but many more people will lose their job if the whole company goes under.

The hopeful outcome is that moving labor-intensive jobs oversees frees up profits that can be used to expand into new product categories.  These new products will require creative designers, managers, etc.  These new roles would likely be filled at headquarters in the USA.  Now, for the labor intensive worker, this creates a dilemma.  If he/she doesn’t have the skill set for this new type of job, they will likely get left behind.  A useful role of the government in this case would be to make new skills training easy and inexpensive.

On the other hand, if the government does try to bring jobs back to the USA, this is the way that decision will play out:

  1. USA companies that are given incentive to produce in the USA will become less competitive.
  2. Foreign companies that are not required (or given incentives) to produce in the USA will flood the USA market with the lower cost goods.
  3. The USA will combat against these foreign goods though the use of quotas to limit/exclude foreign goods or through the use of a duty (tax) that makes the price of the good equal or more than the USA-produced good.
  4. Consumers will suffer the consequences as prices increase due to the higher cost of USA-produced goods.
  5. The new Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection will be inundated by angry consumers who now have their manufacturing jobs back, but can’t afford what they want to purchase because it’s too expensive.

Even though it is extremely painful to lose labor-intensive jobs, it’s a natural function of the global economy.  If this is reversed because politicians make it sound nice to keep jobs in the USA, everyone will suffer.

USA Wages

http://www.schoolforstartups.com/usa-wages/

There were a few interesting news stories the other day regarding wages in the USA. The first story dealt with call center employees and the second story dealt with the apparel industry.

If you’ve had any sort of problem with your computer lately, chances are, when you called the help hotline, you were magically transported to India where a call center employee took your call. With the advent of decreasing phone costs, rapid Internet expansion, and a rising Indian employee base that spoke English, U.S. corporations flocked to India to outsource their menial tasks. The biggest motivator in this shift was cost.

Well, news from this week shows that employee cost in India is rising (10% this year) and call center workers in the USA are becoming cheaper to where they are almost equaling out.

Will we see a mass exodus of these types of jobs back to the USA? Possibly. But what I predict will happen is that these Indian companies will set up shop in the USA. They have grown in their expertise of what it takes to run an efficient call center and will seek to open up offices in the USA. This has already been happening with higher-end outsourcing (BPO – Business Process Outsourcing, Accounting tasks, etc.) So these offices will be Indian-owned, and local workforce run.

In other news, the USA-based apparel company American Apparel announced serious financial woes. American Apparel set themselves apart as having their entire production process located near LA. That’s not Latin America, but Los Angeles. Yes, they were one of the very few USA-based apparel companies that didn’t offshore their production capabilities. They paid USA wages, included health care, and

The advantage was that American Apparel could respond quickly to changes in the marketplace due to proximity. They also appealed to consumers such as college students who were conscious about the working conditions of employees who made their clothes.

In this case, the USA wage is too high. If someone in Los Angeles is making $7/hr to make a t-shirt while someone in Bangladesh is making $0.50/hr, these costs must be recouped in the price of the t-shirt. In a time of economic hardship, consumers will choose the less expensive t-shirt, regardless of where it was produced.

Now, American Apparel has been known for shady management decisions, so this recent news may not be completely about high employee cost, but it has something to do with it.

So, with the call center employees, we are seeing reduced wages bringing price equality with India where wages are rising. But in the case of American Apparel, USA wages are still too high for that industry.

The other interesting component of this topic is the increased minimum wage requirements for the USA and USA territories.

My big question here is – if some of these jobs begin returning to the USA, will there be people willing to work in these positions? When I worked for an apparel company and visited factories in the USA, I heard plant managers saying they had job ads in the paper and no one lining up for the jobs because the job was below them. Perhaps immigrants would take the job, but that’s a whole other can of worms.

UPS and TES – Atlanta Growth Through Global Trade Seminar a Success

http://www.schoolforstartups.com/ups-and-tes-atlanta-growth-through-global-trade-seminar-a-success/

The Growth Through Global Trade Seminar in Atlanta was a success yesterday. We were fortunate to have a wonderful group of people from small business owners to exporters, importers,  freight forwarders, logistic companies and many others. The Metro Atlanta Chamber (MAC) was a wonderful host. Thank you to everyone from MAC for your hard work and wonderful facilities. UPS had its team of people there as well. Much thanks for their hard work. Check out their Twitter Page as they were twittering throughout the event.

Jim and Chris explored  the world of global trade through their own businesses as well as others.  They looked at how to find opportunities and partners in other countries as well as resources for entrepreneurs.  The audience also contributed greatly through their own experience.

The next event is in San Jose, CA on August 24 – check it out.