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Right. Where you and I would disagree on this is on the additional quality not being worth more, as in reality consumers don't on the whole realize they are getting lower quality. You would (and perhaps rightly) hold the retailer or manufacturer blameless absent affirmative fraud. In today's society where everthing seems to be fungible and there are so many items to be dealt with in everyday life, I think a higher duty of care would be in order.shanek said:
So a higher-quality, more expensive item CAN be sold in Wal-Mart IF you can push out the extra units. If you can't, then apparently the additional quality just isn't worth that much to consumers.
I disagree with the logic here. Somehow that because people may have been mistreated in the past it is fine to mistreat them now? There are some big differences between China now and the U.S. back then. First is the governmental differences. People here were able to pass laws against poor labor practices, by voting. This will not be happening anytime soon in China.
Certainly that would be a horrible thing, but even compared to the early 19th Century farms in the US, where this wasn't happening, people were better off in the "unsafe" "sweat shops" of the "robber barons." It's ridiculous to compare them to us; it's perfectly reasonable to compare them to what they had before.
Second is the fact that in that period of American history there wasn't a foreign country that had been through this before, one that profited from allowing cost saving practices that it itself had outlawed. This isn't about evolution of the worldwide economy, this is about externalizing costs to those unable to bear them. We don't allow companies to put the cost of poor safety practices on American workers, and we shouldn't allow them to do it to the Chinese, willing help of their government or no.
It is becoming freer, though, at least in an economic sense. It's got a long way to go, but it is moving in that direction. And the more it moves in that direction, the better off its people are.
That's one way of putting it. The other is that our lust for cheap manufactured goods is helping to extend the reign of one of the most corrupt and repressive regimes on the face of the earth.