SilverWulf
Posts: 196
Joined: 4/7/2005 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: MercTech I see the biggest handicap to the foreign trade deficit the fact that the United States is an arrogant isolationist in matters of manufacture. Our laws and standards refuse to even attempt ISO compliance (International Standards Organization). The metric system has been, by congressional act, the official measurement system for the country since 1789. But, we continue to make equipment that requires special tools to work on in any other country. The idea of a free trade corridor including Mexico, the United States, and Canada looks really good. Except, you can't give away American made goods to an ISO country unless you do extensive rework to make them up to intenational safety standards. ISO standards are neither better nor worse than ANSI standards. But, 90% of the world uses ISO standards and only the U.S.A. is ANSI. Makes for big problems in trade and moving manufacturing out of the country where you can legally build to ISO standards and sell to the world makes more sense. I see NAFTA, and its failure to allieviate the trade deficit, as a symptom of the problem and not a problem in itself. Stefan ISO vs ANSI has little or nothing to do with it. The majority of manufacturing uses CNC processes and it's as simple as clicking one box or the other when choosing a measureing system for the machine to work in. The vast majority of manufacturers are ISO certified. Have you tried to work on an american made piece of equipment lately? Most, if not all, of the fasteners, tubing, fittings, etc... are metric. Caterpillar hasn't had a problem exporting machines, they are used all over the world. The major problem with US manufacturing is the unions. They drive prices up so severely that the companies can't compete on price.
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