In Part 1, the competitive economic interests of nations, industry, and graduates were weighed in the battle for "good enough" markets. If 1 billion Africans, 1 billion Chinese, 1 billion Indians, etc. are buying manufactured goods for the first time between 1960 and 2010, that's a lot of material and a lot of money.
1) Value Added New Industrial Goods
2) Value Added Second-hand Goods
3) Clean Graded Raw Materials
4) Raw Materials Requiring Disassembly Labor
5) Waste Dumping
The biggest change in that half decade were #1 New Industrial Goods manufacturing being relocated to the "Global South" in pursuit of greenfield manufacturing and lower labor rates. Whether that industry was owned and controlled by "home" governments (CCP China, India) or outsourced by Western companies, the net effect had at least one positive outcome.
1) Goods got cheaper for consumers
2) More consumers (in emerging market economies) had income for goods
One effect was growth of the "1%" richest people. I can get my head bitten off for writing this in Vermont, but it's a math problem. The economy doesn't actually accrue via "proportions".
The less profit I make on one individual buyer, the more extraordinarily rich I can be. Taking a 20% profit off of 300 million transactions doesn't make me filthy rich. But taking a 1% profit on 7 billion transactions will make me "One Percenter". As more people on Earth can afford more stuff, the proportion of income held by the top percent increases. Most of the "margin" on the 300 million units goes into making them cost $100 per (7 billion) transaction instead of $1,000 per transaction.
What we want is for little brown boys to be able to buy used gadgets for $50 instead of brand new gadgets for $500 each. We want them to save their $450 and hopefully, one day, have mutual funds. But whenever I mention my dream of Africans owning mutual funds in a generation, I get looked at like I've just said hillbillies will in the next generation work in Japanese owned truck factories in Arkansas? If I'd said that in 1970s, I'd get that look, but a generation later and Hino Trucks are built in Arkansas. So yeah, my goal is for kids in emerging market to not only get onto the internet, but to vote in democracies and save money and educate their daughters, and this "ewastehoax" is getting in my way, big time.
What's next? Africans assembling TVs for Chinese companies? Oh... done that @Hisense in 2013.
1) Value Added New Industrial Goods
2) Value Added Second-hand Goods
3) Clean Graded Raw Materials
4) Raw Materials Requiring Disassembly Labor
5) Waste Dumping
The biggest change in that half decade were #1 New Industrial Goods manufacturing being relocated to the "Global South" in pursuit of greenfield manufacturing and lower labor rates. Whether that industry was owned and controlled by "home" governments (CCP China, India) or outsourced by Western companies, the net effect had at least one positive outcome.
1) Goods got cheaper for consumers
2) More consumers (in emerging market economies) had income for goods
One effect was growth of the "1%" richest people. I can get my head bitten off for writing this in Vermont, but it's a math problem. The economy doesn't actually accrue via "proportions".
The less profit I make on one individual buyer, the more extraordinarily rich I can be. Taking a 20% profit off of 300 million transactions doesn't make me filthy rich. But taking a 1% profit on 7 billion transactions will make me "One Percenter". As more people on Earth can afford more stuff, the proportion of income held by the top percent increases. Most of the "margin" on the 300 million units goes into making them cost $100 per (7 billion) transaction instead of $1,000 per transaction.
What we want is for little brown boys to be able to buy used gadgets for $50 instead of brand new gadgets for $500 each. We want them to save their $450 and hopefully, one day, have mutual funds. But whenever I mention my dream of Africans owning mutual funds in a generation, I get looked at like I've just said hillbillies will in the next generation work in Japanese owned truck factories in Arkansas? If I'd said that in 1970s, I'd get that look, but a generation later and Hino Trucks are built in Arkansas. So yeah, my goal is for kids in emerging market to not only get onto the internet, but to vote in democracies and save money and educate their daughters, and this "ewastehoax" is getting in my way, big time.
What's next? Africans assembling TVs for Chinese companies? Oh... done that @Hisense in 2013.