日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

   

Protectionism no cure for workers wary of China

By G. Dennis O'Brien (China Daily)
Updated: 2007-04-11 14:14

On March 30 Wall Street was shaken by the news that the Bush administration was raising countervailing duties against China. The news initially knocked the stock market 1 percent lower.

But the market calmed down as it became apparent that this was a false alarm, a ploy to get fast-track trade authority through Congress, which empowers the Bush administration to negotiate credibly on complex non-tariff trade measures that require congressional action to implement.

The action was later seen as an attempt to forge a consensus between the White House and Congress to keep US trade policy from turning toward protectionism. Nonetheless the action was a break from the Department of Commerce policy dating back almost 25 years that shields non-market economies from countervailing duties.

Surveys taken last summer by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs found that 58 percent of Americans continue to be in favor of globalization, at least in theory. But fully 43 percent of those surveyed support it only if the government will step in to help out the losers. And there is a growing question as to who those losers will be.

The shift to globalization is becoming ever more disruptive than anticipated. In large part that is due to both the increasing speed of the transition and its changing nature. Globalization has moved from tangible tradable goods to intangible functions in the knowledge based economy.

As a result, the threat of off-shoring and outsourcing has rapidly moved up the value added chain. US white collar workers used to be considered untouchable by global competition. Nowadays once non-tradable services are being offered from points all over the world.

Twenty-five years ago I bought my first Japanese car. Eight years ago I was encouraged to move my call center to India. Six years ago my nephew went from being an IT consultant to being an IT interface with an Indian consultant whose clients are in Boston.

Today, my son, a newly minted computer scientist, competes with other newly minted computer scientists from Yunnan Province in Southwest China. My partner's software development operations, which used to be in Lexington, Massachusetts, are in Gdansk, Poland. And my daughter's boyfriend, an MD radiologist in Boston, competes with doctors all over the world.

Medicine, accounting, analytic services, software design, programming, engineering, economics, architecture all have become fair game. Thomas Friedman's economic paradigm of a "flat world" has indeed taken over. In Friedman's words, the global "web-enabled platform for multiple forms of sharing knowledge and work, irrespective of time, distance, geography and increasingly language" has reached into almost every area of our lives.

This flattening coincides with a massive increase in the global labor force of more than 1.5 billion new participants from China, the former Soviet Union and India.

Over the last dozen years, this influx literally doubled the world's existing workforce. The workers also joined the world's market economy with very little capital in hand. The result is a glut of labor and a rising demand for capital. Thus, the rewards of capital went up as the economic bargaining power of labor began to disappear.
12  

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)



主站蜘蛛池模板: 不卡视频一区二区三区 | 亚欧精品在线观看 | 天天摸天天操天天干 | 青青草原伊人网 | 一级片免费播放 | 葵司免费一区二区三区四区五区 | 久在线观看 | 免费高清毛片 | 成人看片在线 | 黄页网站在线看 | 成人欧美一区二区三区黑人免费 | 日本国产在线观看 | 日本免费黄色小视频 | 超碰婷婷 | 综合九九 | 精品一区国产 | 在线播放日韩 | 精品亚洲国产成av人片传媒 | 国产午夜精品视频 | 久久九九免费视频 | 日韩欧美爱爱 | 亚洲综合五月 | 色99色| 黄色三级小视频 | 国产精品97 | 亚洲成人国产 | 一级日韩一级欧美 | 激情综合区| 男女性动态图 | 久久性av| 激情五月色播五月 | 中文字幕在线观看91 | 久久亚洲精品小早川怜子66 | 综合一区二区三区 | 草草影院欧美 | 女人18毛片一区二区三区 | 亚洲伦乱 | 欧美色插 | aaa日韩| 日韩 欧美 亚洲 | 国产精品999在线观看 |