In todays global economy I wonder what difference it will make where a tool is manufactured.
Here in BC, Canada the Murray River Coal Mine is 95 % chinese owned and has just received federal government permission to bring in 200 chinese workers who will work at 30% lower wages than local miners. The company plans to bring in another 2000 chinese workers soon after. Perhaps the chinese have figured out "why ship the resources to china for manufacture and then ship the goods back for sale when they can move into a country, manufacture there with their own workforce and then sell the goods locally without having to ship anything other than their own votes or er, I mean citizens (which they have an abundance of)".
Here in BC, Canada the Murray River Coal Mine is 95 % chinese owned and has just received federal government permission to bring in 200 chinese workers who will work at 30% lower wages than local miners. The company plans to bring in another 2000 chinese workers soon after. Perhaps the chinese have figured out "why ship the resources to china for manufacture and then ship the goods back for sale when they can move into a country, manufacture there with their own workforce and then sell the goods locally without having to ship anything other than their own votes or er, I mean citizens (which they have an abundance of)".


all this when China's state owned oil company CNOOC's 15 billion take over bid for Canada's Nexen corp, one of Canada's largest oil companies located in the oil sands is in it's final stages of review. I can see the wages coming down and new workers coming in for that operation too. Great for the shareholders but not the population.


Technology and science are always allies. Such practices(in Canada or other countries) will eventually overcome
