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To: dr_lew
Unions and the minimum wage are to blame.

How can a company turn a profit with these albatrosses, both of which were championed by one of the four most evil women of the 20th Century. Yes, that's FDR's chickadee, Frances Perkins.

3 posted on 04/02/2014 10:37:18 PM PDT by re_nortex (DP - that's what I like about Texas)
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To: re_nortex

I don’t know. How can you can compete with slave labor? ... or what is tantamount to it.


5 posted on 04/02/2014 10:39:12 PM PDT by dr_lew
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To: re_nortex
Unions and the minimum wage are to blame.

Correct, but don't forget obamacare.

The Dem unemployment legacy can be easily observed by absolutely anyone.

.

7 posted on 04/02/2014 10:45:36 PM PDT by Seaplaner (Never give in. Never give in. Never...except to convictions of honour and good sense. W. Churchill)
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To: re_nortex

Young Mr. Prillaman makes 300K a year.

Excuse me for laughing, but you could easily find a South Asian CEO for 1/3 of that. And he wouldn’t be some frat rat like Prillaman. He’d be one of the smarter people on the planet. Know some of them like that.

So the working people want too much? Bunk. With transfer and transaction costs now, overseas production saves only a few per cent.

This little pig just wants that extra little point or two because it bumps up the bonus. Minimum wage has nothing to do with it.


8 posted on 04/02/2014 10:46:08 PM PDT by Regulator
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To: re_nortex; dr_lew

I think it’s all of these plus the lure of slave labor. Hey, why not? If there is no God and it’s legal, right?


21 posted on 04/02/2014 11:53:35 PM PDT by Eagles6 (Valley Forge Redux)
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To: re_nortex
Unions and the minimum wage are to blame.

Not really. I don't see where this company is unionized. Also, they are debt free and making a serious profit.

30 posted on 04/03/2014 2:43:19 AM PDT by raybbr (Obamacare needs a death panel.)
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To: re_nortex
At December 31, 2012, we employed 490 associates domestically and 59 associates overseas. We consider our relationship with our associates to be good. None of our associates are represented by a labor union.
34 posted on 04/03/2014 4:37:43 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn.)
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To: re_nortex

“Unions and the minimum wage are to blame.”

Very few if any furniture factories in the south were represented by unions. The wages in southern furniture plants are about $12.00 per hour which equates to $24,000 per year (50 weeks, 40 hours per week, $12 per hour). It would be very difficult for a head of household to raise a family on $24,000 per year today. Lower the pay to the federal minimum wage and the same worker will earn $14,500 per year.

In 2013 the average minimum wage in China was $264 per month which represents an annual income of $3,168. If the US minimum wage is to blame, and Chinese labor is the competition, what would you suggest is the appropriate pay for US labor in US factories? Should a non-union US furniture factory be paying its workers $3,168 per year?

The reality is an American worker cannot feed, clothe, and provide shelter for himself or herself, much less a family, on a wage competitive with Chinese workers. Chinese wages are so low it is more economical to ship lumber from US forests to China, convert the raw lumber to finished furniture, and ship it back across the ocean than it is to employ US workers doing the same job at minimum wage or even below minimum wage.

Unions and the minimum wage are not the problem. The problem is the Congress of the United States approved free trade agreements eliminating tariffs and quotas opening and up the US market to unrestricted sales of products by foreign factories. Once these policies were implemented the economics of entire industries changed. Corporations and Wall Street investment companies decided to allocate manufacturing capital outside the US, resulting in the deindustrialization of the United States over a period of 25 years.

If the same trade policies had been in effect in the second half of the 19th century, the United States would never have become a great industrial power. During the period after the Civil War Congress chose to sustain high tariff for the express purpose of encouraging capital investment in US manufacturing and transportation network required to move raw materials to the factories. Congress also encouraged massive immigration to supply low cost labor to man the factories.

Today we have chosen to eliminate tariffs. If the unions were banned and the minimum wage was eliminated today, the fundamental economics would not change. A US factory offering Chinese wages to workers would have no employees because a worker cannot afford to live in the USA on a Chinese wage.

The answer is simple but politically unacceptable to Wall Street and multinational corporations. Reinstate the tariff rates in effect before George H.W. Bush took office and it will become economically viable to manufacture consumer products in the United States for domestic consumption. Continue the current policies and watch more US factories and manufacturing jobs go offshore.

Twenty five years of the free trade experiment has gutted the US manufacturing economy and is destroying the middle class. Union greed and work rules certainly played a role in encouraging northern factories to move to the southern US in the 1970’s and 1980’s. However, it was elimination of trade barriers that caused factories to exit the US in the last 25 years, not the minimum wage or union activity.

If we continue the same trade policies, the US will look like a poor Central American country in another 25 years. Low wages, high unemployment, high crime, rampant corruption, a dictatorial government, and a two class society with the very poor and a very small ultra rich ruling class.

Both political parties are funded by Wall Street and large corporations. Both political parties supported globalization and free trade. As a result we never had a national debate about free trade, it quietly happened. The results have been disastrous for US workers and the total economy. However, no one in the political class today is even talking about changing policy. Running for office is expensive and any politician proposing a radical change in trade policy would be unable to find funding for an election campaign.


36 posted on 04/03/2014 5:08:52 AM PDT by Soul of the South (Yesterday is gone. Today will be what we make of it.)
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To: re_nortex

Is N. Carolina a Union state, or are they Right to Work?


37 posted on 04/03/2014 5:21:54 AM PDT by G Larry (There's the Beef!)
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To: re_nortex
Unions and the minimum wage are to blame.

What union?

53 posted on 04/03/2014 7:48:54 AM PDT by DoodleDawg
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