While the link between the price of gas and it's relation to the booming Chinese economy and U.S. outsourcing there is interesting and one I had not thought of before, I don't see how you can think that the Chinese can afford to pay more based on vastly lower wages.
>CNN recently has been harping about the record pricing for gas in the U.S. It's the same here too.
>
>In enumerating the causes, one that is mentioned is the hugely increased demand for oil by CHINA. And of course supply/demand is the name of the game.
>
>So here we have an indirect consequence of outsourcing - the increased cost of commodities like oil on our own soil.
>With all of the U.S., Canadian, Japanese and European manufacturing moving to China they naturally need more oil. While we should need less as a consequence is true, that doesn't really matter. This is because the price is NOT based on how much you need. Rather, it is based on 'bidding' by those who do need it.
>Now China, of course, with its VASTLY LOW WAGES
can afford to bid more. Thus we all have to pay more to get what we need, whatever the amount.
>
>Globalization is such a fine thing... corporations get richer and richer while people lose their jobs and get poorer and poorer whether with job or not.
>
>By the way, it would be interesting to see how the government tallies the "inflation rate". In Canada at least it is always quoted in the 1%-2% range annualized yet most everything I buy costs 5%-50% more from purchase to purchase (except for cumputer-related stuff).
>
>Doomer
Chris McCandless
Red Sky Software