New WTO Trade Deal Will Exempt IT-Related Products From Import Tariffs (cio.com) 22
itwbennett writes: Under an agreement finalized Wednesday that applies to all 192 member countries of the World Trade Organization (WTO), tariffs on imports of consumer electronics will be phased out over 7 years starting in July 2016. The agreement affects around 10 percent of the world trade in information and communications technology products and will eliminate around $50 billion in tariffs annually, according to IT industry lobby group DigitalEurope. It expects a $190 billion boost to global GDP from the changes.
Re: (Score:2)
American tech metal (copper) designers are faced with know-nothings in the front office... they confuse customers about the price of gold (you don't pay the "spot price", you pay the "CEA price" when you're making copper for electronics) among other things. I caught one I was working for that didn't write a valid quote for months because gold moved, and their calculation didn't.
Re: (Score:2)
Why
No EPA/OSHA/NLRB/EEOC/etc. We all know this. We all indulge the big lie, burnishing our morals by feathering our own regulatory nest while isolating ourselves from both the costs and the damage.
Don't worry everyone... (Score:4, Insightful)
This will clearly help the world redistribute wealth into everyone's pockets...
Re:Don't worry everyone... (Score:4, Insightful)
Organizations like WTO, WIPO, and the UN along with treaties like NAFTA, TPP, TTIP, and dozens of others aren't so much about redistribution of wealth (that's a secondary goal) as they are a means of removing decision-making power (ie. Sovereignty) from nations.
Take a look at the details of any of these deals and you'll see that they all override the laws of the nations that foolishly sign on. Once a nation can no longer write laws, what are they left with?
All courtesy of the the megalomaniacal globalist elite who keep pushing for their one world government.
YAY!! (Score:1)
Cheap Chinese routers for everybody!
Re: (Score:3)
WTO Sucks! (Score:3)
Governmental Spying (Score:2)
The more IT equipment is traded between nations, the more they can all spy on each other with embedded malware and hidden backdoors. Makes complete sense.
And no, I don't wear a tinfoil hat, and this post is half joke, but only half... I'm sure that at least one NSA official nudged a bureaucrat somewhere that this would be good for national security.
$190 billion in global GDP (Score:3)
In a lot of ways that's worse. It tells me that they're focused completely on the share of that growth they get. There's a name for that, rent seeking. There's a less cheerful name for it too, parasites...
Re: (Score:1)
There's a less cheerful name for it too, parasites...
1. I am absolutely not defending rich people who are assholes with what I'm about to say.
2. Anyone who takes government handouts when they could be working and earning their own living is a parasite too.
Both good and bad. (Score:1)
I doubt china will drop theirs (Score:2)
Where $190 Billion? (Score:2)
But that tariff money does not evaporate after payment, it goes into the economy of where it was paid. If you transfer money from Peter to Paul, there is no direct loss to any economy which includes them both - and in this case it does include both as it is the global economy they are claiming for.
Of course there can be secondary effects suc
Re: (Score:2)
If you transfer money from Peter to Paul, there is no direct loss to any economy which includes them both...
If you're talking about a voluntary transfer in a competitive market, sure. But that's not the case here. A forced transfer of property is pretty much always a direct loss—not of money, of course, but of economic value. The owner loses more value than the thief gains.
Re: (Score:1)
This is what bothers me about anarcho-libertarianism. The government is not a thief. Taxation by itself is not theft. Taxation buys us civilization: infrastructure, law enforcement, etc. The list of congressional powers enumerated in the Constitution of the USA is a good yardstick for what the founders believed the role of government was.
Articles of Confederation failed for a number of reasons, but it demonstrated that there is some minimum size for a functional government and hence a functional society