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Metalworking (rec.crafts.metalworking) Discuss various aspects of working with metal, such as machining, welding, metal joining, screwing, casting, hardening/tempering, blacksmithing/forging, spinning and hammer work, sheet metal work. |
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#1
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html
Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i |
#2
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote:
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke |
#3
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. |
#4
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Pete C. wrote:
Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. |
#5
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"RBnDFW" wrote in message ... Pete C. wrote: Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Just one question he Are you completely out of your freaking mind? -- Ed Huntress |
#6
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 12:28:32 -0500, Ignoramus23298
wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Chuckle...wait the the Commerical Real Estate Crunch hits. Want to start a manufacturing business? Come out to California. Lots and lots of existing shops here, where the owners simply walked away from the building, leaving all the machinery(unpaid for), all the tools (unpaid for) and all the piles of completed work (unpaid for) still sitting in the shipping dock. Ill bet you could get a complete shop for simply walking in the front door. Course..you better have at least 4 yrs worth of expense money in the bank..... Gunner "First Law of Leftist Debate The more you present a leftist with factual evidence that is counter to his preconceived world view and the more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot, homophobe approaches infinity. This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to the subject." Grey Ghost |
#7
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Iggy,
I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve "Ignoramus23298" wrote in message ... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i |
#8
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Steve Lusardi wrote:
(top posting fixed) "Ignoramus23298" wrote in message ... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html (referenced article snipped) Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve For an alternate set of data, consider my customer list -- with a few exceptions, I do all of my work for US manufacturing companies, and they support me very well indeed. No one hires a design consultant if they don't intend to be manufacturing what the guy designs, and relatively soon. While my business isn't booming it's certainly picking up steadily but slowly. -- Tim Wescott Control system and signal processing consulting www.wescottdesign.com |
#9
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 2010-04-01, Hawke wrote:
Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. I thin that being as partisan as you are, leads to making the same mistakes as what the "Obama haters" are making, which is failure to consider reality due to too much prejudices. The reality is that, Obama or not, the United States is built on a flexible, and solid, foundation of free enterprise, relative fairness, competition and well honest educated, labor force with great work ethic. What Bush administration and most everyone else missed, was that due to proliferation of shadow banking, the economy was again susceptible to banking panics. Where the Federal Reserve and Obama administration succeeded, is in credibly convincing the markets that they will not allow a Depression style calamity, no matter what deficit they would need to run. That worked and our economy is returning to sensible functioning. The administration of President Bush gets some, but very little, credit for this. In any case, I urge everyone to thin more about the future than about the past. What is the likely fture that awaits us, what are the dangers or risks, etc. My expectation is for a general recovery and decent growth and modest reduction of unemployment rate. That should help bring deficits closer to sustainable levels. With all of this in mind, and the prices where I hope to be, I would hope be able to find some little industrial style investment of my own. What I do not plan on doing is speculating on currencies, interest rates, and other things. I also do not plan on leveraging myself in a dangerous way. i |
#10
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 2010-04-01, Pete C. wrote:
Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. This is very wise, actually. i |
#11
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Steve Lusardi wrote:
Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve Or the unemployment lines . I'll believe there's progress being made when the job situation changes . -- Snag "90 FLHTCU "Strider" '39 WLDD "PopCycle" BS 132/SENS/DOF |
#12
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Apr 1, 5:41*pm, F. George McDuffee gmcduf...@mcduffee-
associates.us wrote: ... The problem is that the reported results generally indicate that most, if not all, of the conventional socio-economic/political wisdom is wrong, and most of the credos, dogmas and shibboleths of [political] ideology, where these can be put into testable form and where data exists (which is too frequently *NOT* the case), are not [or are no longer] correct. *... Unka George *(George McDuffee) Does it support my hypothesis that ONLY the price of oil controls the world's economies? jsw |
#13
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 2010-04-01, RBnDFW wrote:
The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Recall the timeline of the events. The crisis hit us in the late September of 2008, on the eights year of Bush presidency. The response to it was mostly worked out only by the end of October. Significant money still was not spent by the end of Bush presidency. I would not, therefore, give Bush administration much credit, though they deserve a small amount of credit. i |
#14
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 2010-04-01, Gunner Asch wrote:
Chuckle...wait the the Commerical Real Estate Crunch hits. Want to start a manufacturing business? Come out to California. Lots and lots of existing shops here, where the owners simply walked away from the building, leaving all the machinery(unpaid for), all the tools (unpaid for) and all the piles of completed work (unpaid for) still sitting in the shipping dock. Ill bet you could get a complete shop for simply walking in the front door. Course..you better have at least 4 yrs worth of expense money in the bank..... I do not want to own a manufacturing business because I will mess it up. However, I welcome the commercial real estate collapse because I want to buy commercial (industrial) real estate to rent to manufacturing businesses. Ultimately, the collapse of commercial real estate is good for buyers and renters of real estate, which means it is good for companies that look to expand and buy into new space. If I could buy a collapsed company (assets only, no liabilites) I could sell off the equipment to help finance the purchase. Right now, the prices for industrial equipment that is still usable for modern shops, are increasing again. That's why I realized a few weeks earlier that we'll have a good uptick in manufacturing - someone is buying this stuff to expand on the cheap. i |
#15
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Apr 1, 2:04*pm, Tim Wescott wrote:
Steve Lusardi wrote: (top posting fixed) "Ignoramus23298" wrote in message m... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...57515770173980.... (referenced article snipped) * Iggy, * I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the * stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious * manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness * this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, * you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing * is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of * our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world * market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. * Steve * For an alternate set of data, consider my customer list -- with a few exceptions, I do all of my work for US manufacturing companies, and they support me very well indeed. *No one hires a design consultant if they don't intend to be manufacturing what the guy designs, and relatively soon. *While my business isn't booming it's certainly picking up steadily but slowly. -- Tim Wescott Control system and signal processing consultingwww.wescottdesign.com I see the same thing on the manufacturing end, Tim. Our orders keep increasing every month. New circuit board designs as well as old production. My GM made a delivery this morning of GPS boards. The customer had two pallets of finished electronic assemblies ready to ship TO China!!! Our big problem is component availability. Many distributors list a component with stock on hand and then call and say oops, bin is empty and factory says they will deliver in 6-8 weeks. Meantime, we have to pay for all the rest of the components now and wait till the stray arrives. Then one pops up that gives us a December 15 delivery date. The Chinese way of saying they will NEVER make that transformer again. Overall, things in manufacturing are getting much better than 2009. Paul |
#16
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 13:37:18 -0500, "Pete C."
wrote: snip Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. snip ------- Actually there has been considerable academic analytical work done in this area. The field is called "econometrics," and when the political party affiliation of the president, legislature, etc. are included, generally as dummy or indicator variable (e.g. Democrats = 0, Republicans = 1) it is called "political econometrics." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Econometrics http://www.oswego.edu/~kane/econometrics/ http://www.econometrics.org/ http://www.politicaleconometrics.com/ http://www.card.iastate.edu/publicat...is.aspx?id=970 http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstrea...May%202009.pdf http://ageconsearch.umn.edu/bitstrea...%202009%20.pdf and my own web page http://www.mcduffee-associates.us/PE/Econometrics.htm Some knowledge of statistical techniques is required to understand the methodology, such as multi-variant regression/analysis or canonical analysis, but the advent of inexpensive computer programs such as WinStat [an Excel add-in] and even some "free" programs has greatly simplified the calculations required. The party affiliation/control of the presidency/legislature can easily be shifted to reflect lag time of policy changes or going the other direction, the effect of economic factors on the election outcomes. The problem is that the reported results generally indicate that most, if not all, of the conventional socio-economic/political wisdom is wrong, and most of the credos, dogmas and shibboleths of [political] ideology, where these can be put into testable form and where data exists (which is too frequently *NOT* the case), are not [or are no longer] correct. Naturally this puts a very considerable knot in the politicians and talk show hosts pantyhose, so neither (political) econometrics nor its findings are widely reported or employed. Generally what is discovered is that there is no correlation, which greatly simplifies the analysis (i.e. no need to do any analysis if no correlation), for example the (widely assumed) increase in aggregate unemployment with an increase in the CY$ [current year] or CV$ [inflation adjusted] minimum wage. [Before the flame wars start, more than likely there is some threshold where an effect would be seen, but historically the increases have been below this threshold, and indeed below the rate of inflation.] Unka George (George McDuffee) ............................... The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. L. P. Hartley (1895-1972), British author. The Go-Between, Prologue (1953). |
#17
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"Ignoramus23298" wrote in message ... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i This is the worst I have seen it in awhile. I was laid off in Oct. and I am about to run out of unemployment. Sales went from 4.5 million a month to 1.5 and I was one of many let go. I thought I was safe with almost 13 years into a big company. I think part of the reason is my age and being diabetic for not getting another job. Having a steel plate holding my head up doesn't help much either. Last time I was out of work it was for 9 days before I got another good paying job. All I can do is keep trying to find another job and wait and see what happens with the economy. Only time will tell if our leader is good or bad. Richard W. |
#19
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Ed Huntress wrote:
"RBnDFW" wrote in message ... Pete C. wrote: Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Just one question he Are you completely out of your freaking mind? where'd you say that smiley collection was? |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Awesome! How many manufacturing jobs are they moving from China to the USA? RogerN "Ignoramus23298" wrote in message ... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html |
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Relocating a underwater machine shop? was Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Let the Record show that Gunner Asch on or
about Thu, 01 Apr 2010 13:20:55 -0700 did write/type or cause to appear in rec.crafts.metalworking the following: "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Chuckle...wait the the Commerical Real Estate Crunch hits. Want to start a manufacturing business? Come out to California. Lots and lots of existing shops here, where the owners simply walked away from the building, leaving all the machinery(unpaid for), all the tools (unpaid for) and all the piles of completed work (unpaid for) still sitting in the shipping dock. Ill bet you could get a complete shop for simply walking in the front door. Course..you better have at least 4 yrs worth of expense money in the bank..... Which leads me to the question, how long would it take to rig such an enterprise onto transportation to another location, one which might be considered more business friendly? tschus pyotr p.s. Yes, I am remembering the bit in a post-ww3 novel, where one group of SEALS basically pulled an unused train up to their base and loaded everything onto it that wasn't nailed down, they pried up everything else. "Never know, It could be useful someday..." "We're not pack-rats. We are 'Rodents of extreme acquisition and retention'." - pyotr filipivich We will drink no whiskey before its nine. It's eight fifty eight. Close enough! |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Apr 1, 7:51*pm, F. George McDuffee gmcduf...@mcduffee-
associates.us wrote: On Thu, 1 Apr 2010 14:12:56 -0700 (PDT), Jim Wilkins ... ...What is unusual from the free market "supply and demand" perspective is the current run-up of oil prices to c. 85$US/bbl with no significant increase in global consumption, no significant increase in the cost of production, and no fall in aggregate supply. *This appears to indicate major market manipulation and profiteering.... Unka George *(George McDuffee) Not only oil, prices in general have been pushing upwards as much as demand permits. How much have you seen On Sale since Christmas? WalMart clothing has gone up a lot. http://www.wtrg.com/oil_graphs/oilprice1947.gif The price spikes were followed by recessions, reflected in the rapid drops. Perhaps the one to analyse for manipulation is the sharp rise in June 2000, shortly before the end of Clinton's term and seemingly not obscured by concurrent political events. By October it was being blamed on Bush. jsw |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 1 Apr 2010 14:12:56 -0700 (PDT), Jim Wilkins
wrote: On Apr 1, 5:41*pm, F. George McDuffee gmcduf...@mcduffee- associates.us wrote: ... The problem is that the reported results generally indicate that most, if not all, of the conventional socio-economic/political wisdom is wrong, and most of the credos, dogmas and shibboleths of [political] ideology, where these can be put into testable form and where data exists (which is too frequently *NOT* the case), are not [or are no longer] correct. *... Unka George *(George McDuffee) Does it support my hypothesis that ONLY the price of oil controls the world's economies? jsw ============= A very good question, but one that illustrates the limitations, i.e. most of the credos, dogmas and shibboleths of [political] ideology, ==where these can be put into testable form and where data exists== (which is too frequently *NOT* the case), =========== The big problem is phrasing or stating your question in a concise, testable and consensual format. Two immediate problems (there are most likely many others) (1) What does the price of oil mean? If US dollars, then CY or inflation adjusted, if not US dollars what? Euros, Yen, or gold/silver? (2) What metric should we use for the world's economies? Average unemployment rate? Median unemployment rate? Absolute or percent change in GDP? How should the data be weighted? By population [China rules]? By percent of GWP (gross world product) generated? [USA rules] Un weighted? [Luxembourg = China or USA] Foreign exchange/conversion rates have a huge effect on this question. Should we use the trading exchange rates or the PPP [parity purchasing power] equivalents? FWIW -- The price of oil appears to have a big effect in some economies such as the US, while commodity price rises in agricultural products such as rice, may have a major effect in the less developed countries. What is unusual from the free market "supply and demand" perspective is the current run-up of oil prices to c. 85$US/bbl with no significant increase in global consumption, no significant increase in the cost of production, and no fall in aggregate supply. This appears to indicate major market manipulation and profiteering. http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=aBbjr6rE0Mcs http://www.proactiveinvestors.com.au...ies--6163.html http://www.upstreamonline.com/live/a...chargenews_rss http://www.allvoices.com/contributed...llars-a-barrel http://www.businessinsider.com/opec-...-80-oil-2010-3 Unka George (George McDuffee) ............................... The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. L. P. Hartley (1895-1972), British author. The Go-Between, Prologue (1953). |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"John R. Carroll" wrote in message ... Ignoramus23298 wrote: On 2010-04-01, RBnDFW wrote: The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Recall the timeline of the events. The crisis hit us in the late September of 2008, on the eights year of Bush presidency. The crisis had been in the works for nearly two years at that point with Congress passing the first of several spending measures on January 25th (?) 2008. Sounds about right, the crisis hit when the Democrats won big in the election in 2006 and took a turn for the worse when Obama pulled ahead in the polls around Sept 2008. No wonder the Bible says the "Fool" has said there is no God, you Atheists prove the Bible correct time after time and you don't even know it! RogerN |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Ignoramus23298 wrote:
On 2010-04-01, RBnDFW wrote: The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Recall the timeline of the events. The crisis hit us in the late September of 2008, on the eights year of Bush presidency. The crisis had been in the works for nearly two years at that point with Congress passing the first of several spending measures on January 25th (?) 2008. Looks like the stimulus payments will be sent out ahead of schedule, with the 800,000 direct deposit payments on Monday April 28th, Tuesday, Wednesday, and a whopping 5 million on Friday (none on Thursday). The schedule of payments will follow the original schedule, just accelerated by a week. IIRC, the cost was 130 billion dollars. -- John R. Carroll |
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Relocating a underwater machine shop? was Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 16:35:51 -0700, pyotr filipivich
wrote: snip Which leads me to the question, how long would it take to rig such an enterprise onto transportation to another location, one which might be considered more business friendly? snip ========= While governmental/community attitude may be a part of the problem, from what I can tell from the auction listings, a much larger problem is the prevalence of obsolete/obsolescent machinery which are most likely not worth the money to move for a high volume commercial operation. Even if the equipment is in pristine condition, if it is a generation (or more) old, quite likely it is not worth moving to a new commercial location. When a shop is filled with obsolete and/or "clapped out" equipment, the odds are very high that the front office is similarly "equipped," e.g. no CRM [customer relations management software], no production scheduling software, no P/M software, no A/R-A/P (accounts payable-accounts receivable software), no job costing/tracking software, no or minimal CNC/cad software, minimal tool crib controls, slow or no internet connections, no web page, etc. It may be possible to cherry pick from several shops and assemble a decent commercial operation, but there is a reason that the bankrupt shops went bankrupt. Unka George (George McDuffee) ............................... The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. L. P. Hartley (1895-1972), British author. The Go-Between, Prologue (1953). |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"RogerN" wrote in message m... Awesome! How many manufacturing jobs are they moving from China to the USA? RogerN One of my clients ( www.esystemstechnology.com ) recently won a contract to manufacture equipment that had been built in China. In the high-tech world, engineering skill, quality and reliability trumps a few bucks in price. In my experience there is much more engineering work this year than last. |
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Relocating a underwater machine shop? was Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 16:35:51 -0700, pyotr filipivich
wrote: Let the Record show that Gunner Asch on or about Thu, 01 Apr 2010 13:20:55 -0700 did write/type or cause to appear in rec.crafts.metalworking the following: "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Chuckle...wait the the Commerical Real Estate Crunch hits. Want to start a manufacturing business? Come out to California. Lots and lots of existing shops here, where the owners simply walked away from the building, leaving all the machinery(unpaid for), all the tools (unpaid for) and all the piles of completed work (unpaid for) still sitting in the shipping dock. Ill bet you could get a complete shop for simply walking in the front door. Course..you better have at least 4 yrs worth of expense money in the bank..... Which leads me to the question, how long would it take to rig such an enterprise onto transportation to another location, one which might be considered more business friendly? That is what some of the folks are doing. Some saw the California economy going south a couple years ago, so sold their homes and business locations, and bought raw land in Idaho, and other states. One client of mine sold his house for $350k, and sold his shop local for $850k He moved to Idaho, bought 25 acres, had a brand new house built, had a Butler Building erected..all for less than $250k, moved his machines up for $50k and now has more than $900k in the bank, a fully functional machine shop in operation and is happy as a clam. Not everyone was that smart, or able to do that, unfortunately. Too many forgot that the client was UPS away, or for the odd ones..needed to be near their clients. Now that the housing market bottom has fallen out..and the Commercial Real Estate crunch is on the close horizon....that option may no longer be available. Gunner tschus pyotr p.s. Yes, I am remembering the bit in a post-ww3 novel, where one group of SEALS basically pulled an unused train up to their base and loaded everything onto it that wasn't nailed down, they pried up everything else. "Never know, It could be useful someday..." "We're not pack-rats. We are 'Rodents of extreme acquisition and retention'." - pyotr filipivich We will drink no whiskey before its nine. It's eight fifty eight. Close enough! "First Law of Leftist Debate The more you present a leftist with factual evidence that is counter to his preconceived world view and the more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot, homophobe approaches infinity. This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to the subject." Grey Ghost |
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Relocating a underwater machine shop? was Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 19:18:51 -0600, F. George McDuffee
wrote: On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 16:35:51 -0700, pyotr filipivich wrote: snip Which leads me to the question, how long would it take to rig such an enterprise onto transportation to another location, one which might be considered more business friendly? snip ========= While governmental/community attitude may be a part of the problem, from what I can tell from the auction listings, a much larger problem is the prevalence of obsolete/obsolescent machinery which are most likely not worth the money to move for a high volume commercial operation. Even if the equipment is in pristine condition, if it is a generation (or more) old, quite likely it is not worth moving to a new commercial location. When a shop is filled with obsolete and/or "clapped out" equipment, the odds are very high that the front office is similarly "equipped," e.g. no CRM [customer relations management software], no production scheduling software, no P/M software, no A/R-A/P (accounts payable-accounts receivable software), no job costing/tracking software, no or minimal CNC/cad software, minimal tool crib controls, slow or no internet connections, no web page, etc. It may be possible to cherry pick from several shops and assemble a decent commercial operation, but there is a reason that the bankrupt shops went bankrupt. Unfortunately..most (of what Ive seen so far) of the shops that went bankrupt here in California..was that their clients went tits up first. But you do make a good point. Gunner Unka George (George McDuffee) .............................. The past is a foreign country; they do things differently there. L. P. Hartley (1895-1972), British author. The Go-Between, Prologue (1953). "First Law of Leftist Debate The more you present a leftist with factual evidence that is counter to his preconceived world view and the more difficult it becomes for him to refute it without losing face the chance of him calling you a racist, bigot, homophobe approaches infinity. This is despite the thread you are in having not mentioned race or sexual preference in any way that is relevant to the subject." Grey Ghost |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 1 Apr 2010 22:36:43 +0200, the infamous "Steve Lusardi"
scrawled the following: Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve, I dare you to spend an hour in Walmart and NOT find at least a hundred "Made in the USA" stickers on items. Manufacturing is still alive and well here, but the mass production has gone entirely overseas. Other companies are having things produced elsewhere and assembled here, with our labor. Virtually ALL of the small, custom items are still made here. Much low-volume/high-technology stuff is made here, etc. Don't write us off entirely. Hell, my glare guards are made here in Oregon...by me, using as many domestic products as possible. www.diversify.com/shades2.html Volume? We won't discuss that. sigh -- It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change. -- Charles Darwin |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On 4/1/2010 11:37 AM, Pete C. wrote:
Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. I agree with you that political parties don't want to admit when their policies fail. But that is why you don't go to them if you want to know if they succeeded or failed. You look at the facts and statistics. Just look at the economic statistics under Bush. You don't have to ask anyone if they are good or not. It's obvious they are horrible. Now you have to give Obama the time to see if his are any good. He's been there a little more than a year. A year ago the stock market was at 6600 and the growth rate was -6%, and unemployment was around 10%. Needless to say, things are much better. Just look at the stats. But Obama needs more time before you can actually credit him for the turn around. Usually it takes at least 2 or 3 years to see how your policies work. By 2011 or 2012 we're really know how Obama did. But I know that no matter how poorly or how well he does it'll be better than Bush. Hawke |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Just one question he Are you completely out of your freaking mind? I was just wondering why he wasn't giving Reagan the credit for the positive results. Hawke |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 16:07:52 -0500, the infamous Ignoramus23298
scrawled the following: On 2010-04-01, Hawke wrote: What the hell are you quoting HIM for? I thin that being as partisan as you are, leads to making the same mistakes as what the "Obama haters" are making, which is failure to consider reality due to too much prejudices. Your term "Obama haters" isn't quite correct. Most of us don't hate the man himself, we dislike what he stands for: liberalism, bigotry (as affirmative action), and socialism/HUGE government. The reality is that, Obama or not, the United States is built on a flexible, and solid, foundation of free enterprise, relative fairness, competition and well honest educated, labor force with great work ethic. Except where unions and greed (or do I repeat myself?) come in, that's very true. What Bush administration and most everyone else missed, was that due to proliferation of shadow banking, the economy was again susceptible to banking panics. So our Chief puts the guy responsible for that in charge of the treasury. sigh Where the Federal Reserve and Obama administration succeeded, is in credibly convincing the markets that they will not allow a Depression style calamity, no matter what deficit they would need to run. That worked and our economy is returning to sensible functioning. Gee, that's good to hear, Ig. Saaaay, I'd like to sell you some warehouse space in the Everglades. Got a minute? The administration of President Bush gets some, but very little, credit for this. In any case, I urge everyone to thin more about the future than about the past. What is the likely fture that awaits us, what are the dangers or risks, etc. Oh, we are, Ig. We are! My expectation is for a general recovery and decent growth and modest reduction of unemployment rate. That should help bring deficits closer to sustainable levels. What's Obama got to do with that? He is, if anything, slowing it with his spending policies. Shrub's guilty of that, too. big sigh With all of this in mind, and the prices where I hope to be, I would hope be able to find some little industrial style investment of my own. What I do not plan on doing is speculating on currencies, interest rates, and other things. I also do not plan on leveraging myself in a dangerous way. Good to hear. -- It is not the strongest of the species that survives, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change. -- Charles Darwin |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... "RBnDFW" wrote in message ... Pete C. wrote: Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Just one question he Are you completely out of your freaking mind? -- Ed Huntress What I know and understand about politics wouldn't cover the bottom of a very small thimble, but I have to ask, just as Ed did. Are you out of your freaking mind? Ten years for Bush policies to start working? Seems to me, they started working long ago. Why the hell do you think we've been in the mess we've "enjoyed"? Harold |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"anorton" wrote in message news "RogerN" wrote in message m... Awesome! How many manufacturing jobs are they moving from China to the USA? RogerN One of my clients ( www.esystemstechnology.com ) recently won a contract to manufacture equipment that had been built in China. In the high-tech world, engineering skill, quality and reliability trumps a few bucks in price. In my experience there is much more engineering work this year than last. That's good to hear. Sometimes I wonder if there's ever a WWIII, will the USA be able to stand on our own manufacturing ability, or will we need to be supplied by those we are at war with? RogerN |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"Larry Jaques" wrote in message ... On Thu, 1 Apr 2010 22:36:43 +0200, the infamous "Steve Lusardi" scrawled the following: Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve, I dare you to spend an hour in Walmart and NOT find at least a hundred "Made in the USA" stickers on items. Manufacturing is still alive and well here, but the mass production has gone entirely overseas. Other companies are having things produced elsewhere and assembled here, with our labor. Virtually ALL of the small, custom items are still made here. Much low-volume/high-technology stuff is made here, etc. Don't write us off entirely. Hell, my glare guards are made here in Oregon...by me, using as many domestic products as possible. www.diversify.com/shades2.html Volume? We won't discuss that. sigh -- Do your glare guards make a TV screen viewable outdoors? I'm wondering because one of my hobby projects is first person view R/C, mounting a camera in a R/C model and operating it by viewing the picture on a TV/Monitor. They have video goggles but they are running over $300 for the better resolution (640 X 480) ones last time I looked. RogerN |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"Steve Lusardi" wrote:
Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve I work in the manufacturing sector. I was pretty thrilled the other day when a stud we use that was purchased off shore was replaced by a USA made item. USA was able to make the spec and do it for a competitive price. I purchase a lot of things from McMaster-Carr, I've noticed over time, that a huge amount of what they sell is produced in the USA. When it isn't, it is from nations like France, Germany, and Japan. I seldom recieve Chineese products from that firm. Manufacturing isn't dead yet, we just have a lot of competition that didn't exist not so long ago. It is sorting itself out. Wes -- "Additionally as a security officer, I carry a gun to protect government officials but my life isn't worth protecting at home in their eyes." Dick Anthony Heller |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
"Richard W." wrote:
All I can do is keep trying to find another job and wait and see what happens with the economy. Only time will tell if our leader is good or bad. I wish you success in the job hunt. Back during 2001/02 I got a taste of going from wanted and needed to needing to be wanted. It wasn't a pleasant experience though I think I've grown from it. Only time will tell on our leadership and then the view be subject to the distortion of one's ideology. Wes |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
On Thu, 01 Apr 2010 14:04:10 -0700, Tim Wescott
wrote: Steve Lusardi wrote: (top posting fixed) "Ignoramus23298" wrote in message ... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html (referenced article snipped) Iggy, I'm amazed by your statement. When was the last time any product in the stores said "Made in the USA"? There is virtually no serious manufacturing left in the States. You don't need statistics to witness this and in point of fact, without seeing US products on the shelves, you have absolutely no justification for believing them. The same thing is happening in Europe and Japan. We have already exported almost all of our manufacturing to the third world to remain competitive in the world market. Don't believe the **** you read....look on the shelves. Steve For an alternate set of data, consider my customer list -- with a few exceptions, I do all of my work for US manufacturing companies, and they support me very well indeed. No one hires a design consultant if they don't intend to be manufacturing what the guy designs, and relatively soon. While my business isn't booming it's certainly picking up steadily but slowly. Only another anecdote, but my situation is similar. I design and build automation, tooling, and misc manufacturing equipment. I ran out of work for the first time in 25 years around the end of 2008. There's been enough to keep busy since, but no backlog. More recently demand has increased to the point that I've started refusing work again. On the other hand, employment at my largest customer is still way down, and the folks that are there are working harder than ever. In other words, they're spending on capital projects, but seem to be waiting as long as possible to rehire production workers. -- Ned Simmons |
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Manufacturing is BOOMING in USA
Harold & Susan Vordos wrote:
"Ed Huntress" wrote in message ... "RBnDFW" wrote in message ... Pete C. wrote: Hawke wrote: On 4/1/2010 10:28 AM, Ignoramus23298 wrote: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1000...739806306.html Manufacturing Expands World-Wide Best month of activity in USA in six years, makes my search for an investment in a warehouse, possibly, even too late, although realistically I still have a chance. My own opinion, mostly based on liquidation auction prices for equipment that is usable in modern production (as opposed to clapped out 50 year old manual lathes), is that we are about to see sharp economic growth. U.S. factory operators saw their best month of activity in nearly six years during March. The Institute for Supply Management reported Thursday that its index of manufacturing activity for March moved to a reading of 59.6, from 56.5 the month before and 58.4 in January. March's level was above the 57.0 economists had expected to see, and it was the highest reading since July 2004. Readings over 50 indicate growth. I do think that "Obama haters" , who succumbed to pessimism because of who is in the White House, are making a big mistake in not recognizing that this country has every potential to be a great economic and industrial machine. We are now in a bull stock market by any standard, and are seeing improvements in both growth and productivity. If this continues, the United States will see a lot of incremental tax revenues from additional economic activity and capital gains, and that alone could be a big help to reduce budget deficit. "Obama policies", which anyone should be free to like or not like, do not fundamentally change the fact that we are a dynamic, capitalist economy. In fact, availability of health insurance may help someone to move towards self-employment. i Don't try to tell right wingers that anything Obama is doing is working, is good policy, is successful, or is the right thing to do. They continue to believe in the tried and failed policies that Bush and the republicans stand for, and that they put in place when Bush was president. What's scary is that they want another chance to implement the exact same failed policies again. They have simply not learned that what they believed was wrong. So don't try to tell them Obama's way of doing things is good. They won't hear of it. They're wedded to failed policies and that's that. Now the rest of the normal people are all starting to see what you see and what I have already said before, things are turning around and we are beginning a new phase of positive economic growth. Just be happy we're coming out of the Bush debacle and are moving ahead once again and make some moves that allow you to profit from seeing the obvious. Hawke Unfortunately, nobody left or right can admit when their policies have failed, and mostly nobody can even correlate their policies and the actual results since there is such a long lag time before they typically have any effect. This is of course why everything is cyclic. Of course there's lag time. The Bush policies are finally starting to yield positive results. Of course, BHO's lackeys won't be giving Bush credit. Just one question he Are you completely out of your freaking mind? -- Ed Huntress What I know and understand about politics wouldn't cover the bottom of a very small thimble, but I have to ask, just as Ed did. Are you out of your freaking mind? Ten years for Bush policies to start working? Seems to me, they started working long ago. Why the hell do you think we've been in the mess we've "enjoyed"? of course my statement was tongue in cheek, and the responses were predictable. We've beaten this dead horse to death, but I do have to point out that the current political and economic quagmire we find ourselves in has many roots, and many more pointed fingers, some justified, some not. My conclusion, which is worth what you pay for it, is that our leaders did some incredibly stupid things over a long period of time. I think the Democrats did the most damage, but not by much. Today, I don't know if the situation is salvageable. I am just going to take care of myself and the people I care about, hope for the best, plan for the worst. And I'm going to be a lot more politically active. |
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