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In reply to the discussion: NYT: How U.S. Lost Out on iPhone Work [View all]joshcryer
(62,536 posts)23. It's not so, it's a made up stat.
You train a group of 12 to set up a way to assemble a component, then you perfect it. That group of 12 goes on to train another group of 12. You can do this in the 10 days that they had been tasked by Foxconn. They're making this stat up because you really don't need to have highly skilled laborers to assemble components, any components, for that matter.
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Well, that's encouraging, at least, but tell me, how do you feel about industry in the UK?
whathehell
Jan 2012
#13
A couple of decades ago, that high-tech manufacturing was concentrated in the US.
AdHocSolver
Jan 2012
#12
Usual reason?...US workers have the "nerve" to want unions and/or a 1st world wage?
whathehell
Jan 2012
#4
Nope...It Sounds like typical corporate BS "reason" for hiring younger, cheaper and/or foreign
whathehell
Jan 2012
#15
To help the US economy, only the products sold in the US need to be made here.
AdHocSolver
Jan 2012
#10
Of course...Multi-nationals get away with this sort of thing by the poor around the world.
whathehell
Jan 2012
#16
How about a percentage of what the principals make. The point is starting a dialog.
Bonhomme Richard
Jan 2012
#36