egb_hibs
Private Member
- Joined
- Jul 2, 2002
We've touched on similar subjects before but I think this is a particularly pressing subject given the failure of Labour's credit based economy.
But it's one that I think is as intractable as ever.
Put simply, how can we compete with cheaper labour costs overseas?
It seems to me we can only do that if;
...we had a large enough internal market to enable it; we don't
...we had mineral resources which could be exploited; other than coal, which is now an unfashionable product, we do not (AFAIK) and I'm not sure it would be economical either
...we had various markets cornered where people were prepared to pay a premium for british goods (like they will with, say, swiss watches, regional wines, or whatever). But we don't have much if any of that, and are too big an economy for this to be a central factor in any case.
I just don't see how we can do it. We may have mostly got rid of militant unionism that was a problem for heavy industry in the past. But the overheads of reentering such markets is massive, and surely not affordable.
The one area where there is real opportunity I think - as wee162 has pointed out - is precision engineering. But our education system is orientated wholly in the wrong direction for success in this area, and by definition it's not going to provide mass employment.
So what do we do?
But it's one that I think is as intractable as ever.
Put simply, how can we compete with cheaper labour costs overseas?
It seems to me we can only do that if;
...we had a large enough internal market to enable it; we don't
...we had mineral resources which could be exploited; other than coal, which is now an unfashionable product, we do not (AFAIK) and I'm not sure it would be economical either
...we had various markets cornered where people were prepared to pay a premium for british goods (like they will with, say, swiss watches, regional wines, or whatever). But we don't have much if any of that, and are too big an economy for this to be a central factor in any case.
I just don't see how we can do it. We may have mostly got rid of militant unionism that was a problem for heavy industry in the past. But the overheads of reentering such markets is massive, and surely not affordable.
The one area where there is real opportunity I think - as wee162 has pointed out - is precision engineering. But our education system is orientated wholly in the wrong direction for success in this area, and by definition it's not going to provide mass employment.
So what do we do?
