Tuesday, November 18, 2008

Made in the USA

Do you want to know when the economic mess will be over with? Do you want to know when this country will get back on track and our standards of living will improve? Well boys and girls, I can tell you when. Come here and listen closely to me...the economy will get back on track when the stuff we buy is made in this country again. Simple, isn't it?

You see kids, the 1940's and '50's was our last real economic expansion. And by 'real economic expansion' I mean it was a time when millions of people made good money and got good benefits on their jobs which enabled them to buy houses, cars, and send their kids to college. Almost everyone shared in the economic prosperity, not just the top 10 percent of the richest folks in the country. And the reason why we had that big economic expansion that lifted our parents and grandparents out of poverty was because most everything we sold in this country was made in this country. Your family and friends and neighbors worked in all those factories that made the TV sets, the recliners, the gas guzzling cars, the frozen foods, the cans they put Spam in, the Spam that was eaten, and so on. And they made good wages for doing so. And the companies back then took an interest in the communities they had their factories in because they had to, they wanted to keep their workers happy so that they would continue to work and produce so that they, the company that owned the factory, could make profits.

Somewhere along the line American business decided it wasn't making enough money and that the American worker was being greedy by asking for things like health insurance and a 5 day 40 hour work week, so they decided to shut those factories down and move them to Mexico, China, and other places. And for a time this worked out okay because we kept right on buying the stuff that we used to make that was now being made overseas.

But then it caught up to us and now we're paying the price with this global economic melt down. The economic house of cards is collapsing around us, as well it should. It's just absurd to think that any system like the one we've got can succeed. You can't keep wages and benefits low and expect people to be able to buy the flood of consumer goods that are made in cheaply in China. If you are out of work because your job got sent to a Communist country then you're not going to be able to afford what ever it is they're going to make and export back to us. The mantra for big business for the past 30 years has been 'profit at any cost!' and now that cost is finally being felt.

When we bring manufacturing back to this country and we do it in an environmentally sustainable way then we'll see this mess begin to fade away. And when we restore some sane regulation to big business, banking, and Wall Street we'll get the other part of our economic house in order. One of the things I learned from reading The Shock Doctrine by Naomi Klein, she's another of my celebrity girlfriends by the way, is that the way out of the mess that Milton Friedman hath wrought with his free market fantasy bullshit is through a mix of government take over of certain key industries and by retaining manufacturing inside a country that has been hard hit by outsourcing.

It's my feeling that we'll have a saner more economically and environmentally viable world when we stop making American consumer goods in China and make them here instead. Our planet will thank us when we stop telling people in India that they have to use their land to grow flowers for florist shops in El Segundo, California and Sioux City, Iowa. Your kids and your grand kids will thank us if we stop burning so much gas and oil to bring the cheap sweatshop made clothes from islands in the Pacific to the malls of America and Canada.

If we make here, in an environmentally and economically sustainable way, then we'll all benefit.

(This post was inspired in part by this post by Matty Boy and by an increasing sense that the people at the top really don't know what the fuck they're doing.)

14 comments:

Megan said...

But what about "our responsibility to the shareholders?" You know they'll be trotting that line out again soon...

Claire said...

You're dead right on this. I was outraged yesterday to hear that the FDA is opening three field offices in China to supervise drug manufacturing plants. So let me get this straight...we allow US drugmakers to outsource mfg. to China, where they don't manufacture to even close to our standards, the companies profit hugely AND the taxpayers are expected to pay for the additional oversight? How about if the FDA does its job and tells big pharma that if they want to sell drugs in the US, they have to MAKE them in the US.

Jess Wundrun said...

Hey Monkey Man, well said indeed.

As you know, my family has made an effort to only buy American made products this year. We have not succeeded in going 100% but we do probably spend 95% of our dollars on domestic goods.

I saw a statistic once that said that if every American family shifted just $20 dollars away from foreign products to USA made, 5 million new jobs would be created.

At Christmas time we Monkey Muckers would do well to try to buy as many domestically produced gifts as possible. That $20 figure is a breeze. There is a website called Etsy.com that many of us are familiar with that sells items that small home crafters produce. The majority of books at your local store (or Barnes & Noble, if you must) are still published here, and they make great gifts. Otherwise, google "Made In USA". Some sites are outdated. But the extra few minutes spent on the effort to find out where products are made is most definately worth it in the end.

At the store, turn the product over, or examine the tag. Give gift cards to LOCALLY owned restaurants, who are going to experience some tough times. Please, try to avoid the chains. When you shop, remember that Wal-Mart started this mess, so don't reward them.

Merry Christmas!

Dr. Monkey Von Monkerstein said...

Amen Jess, I agree that buying locally where ever possible is the best possible thing for local economies. We try to buy from locally owned businesses and go to locally owned restaurants when ever we can. Thanks for helping keep our fellow citizens working with your 'Buy American' campaign.

Unknown said...

Ha!! Well said, Dr. Monkey! The "Ha!" is because i remember back when it was more of a republican thing to say "buy American" remember? Back in the 70's or 80's? And we cool liberals were like, "hey if the Japanese make a better car, I'm buying THAT" and now it's the republican party who have supported shipping our jobs overseas... what a world.

I'm buying only 'Murkin made for xmas too.

Ubermilf said...

I want to believe we can learn from our mistakes.

Snad said...

How 'bout we just stop buying crap altogether? I mean, does your brother really need another coffee warmer that plugs into what used to be a cigarette lighter? I didn't think so?

Mnmom said...

I'm with snad.
Well said Dr. Monkey.
How about we all buy less crap, and when we HAVE to buy crap, by American.
Let's have tax incentives to drive our cars until they can't be driven anymore.
Let's bring back the fix-it man and make appliances that last longer than 6 years.
Let's put our Holiday focus on Peace on Earth, Goodwill towards all Mankind and take it off "Shop Now for the Holidays!"
Let's just quit it with the unsustainable stuff like flowershops.

Matthew Hubbard said...

Thanks for the linkage, Doc. We share Naomi Klein, Elizabeth Kucinich and Indira Varma as celebrity girlfriends. I guess if we ever meet, everything's gonna go fine for the first two or three beers, and then one of us is going to say something and it will have to be resolved out behind the bar in the alley.

Elizabeth said...

Monkey, my favorite line (though it was quite difficult to choose) was ". . . American business decided it wasn't making enough money . . . "

I always wonder what "enough" is for the people making the decisions.

How big *should* the salaries be? How many yachts should the CEOs be able to buy with those salaries? How big should the house be? On and on, down the line.

I seem to always return to the question of what is "enough." I wish someone could clue me in.

Anonymous said...

These guys have to be regulated because their business existence is purely to increase profit. Without any check on them, they would go right over the cliff. Like they have already.

There is no such thing as "enough" for them.

Gifted Typist said...

Yup, you're right. They could oil that rust belt with a bit of "Buy USA"!

Countries like Canada aren't keen though. NAFTA has been our lifeblood.

Unknown said...

If you are really interested in finding made-in-the-USA products check out www.locallectual.com to make the task easier.

Chris said...

Great post and well laid out, Dr. M.