For quite a few years now I've argued with people regarding off-shoring manufacturing.No there’s not.
There’s a huge population of undereducated, under-skilled people, reliant on the government and/or drugs, that should be working. The HF torque wrench undercut those folks, and therefore is every bit as treacherous as a $B fab.
Of all places, the failure of SF should be a clear indicator to the effect of these folks.
Realizing that around half the population is below average, and still should have something to do and have opportunity. Not every schmuck in nowhere, USA can have a LAM research stock option rags to riches story.
As much as some folks would like this, im not really for your CA comrades compelling you by force any more than they have, to give up your situation for the other guy. But in return if I can buy US made stuff and create opportunities for the next guy, I will. And you should too. Not just sweep it under the rug to save a buck. That WMT/HF culture is what undercut many of these folks decades ago.
The free-trade advocates say that moving manufacturing to the most-efficient (i.e. cheapest) production areas (typically China) results in the greatest efficiency and therefore the greatest net good.
My counter-argument is that that argument falls apart when it's your job that gets offshored. Now the product you helped manufacture is cheaper, but you can't afford it anyway because you're out of work.
If not your job, it could be your spouse's, your children's, your friend's, or your neighbour's job. Regardless, someone will lose a job, and you, if working, will get to pay the social costs of their unemployment. All of a sudden, that cheap product at Walmart doesn't look like such a bargain.
Some years ago, a high-profile American politician said (I paraphrase) "Our people in California design the I-phones, and then the phones are manufactured in China, and thus each part of the global village does what it does best, leading to the greatest overall prosperity".
So how many designers does Apple employ in California vs. manufacturing personnel in China? I bet it's NOT a 1:1 ratio. 1:10? 1:100? Worse?
And what would this politician have said if her job were to "outsourced" to China? It's easy to farm out the jobs of the "deplorables", harder when your own job disappears.
Besides that, the promised cheaper prices often don't happen - it's simply more profit for the company.
And regarding those who say "Those jobs are gone. They're not coming back. It's all done by robots anyway!", I reply "If it's all done by robots, why is it cheaper to manufacture in China?"
I'd better quit ranting, but do feel strongly that the 1st World needs to bring back its manufacturing.