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Fortune: Is Trade with China Literally Killing Middle-Aged White American Men?

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Dwindling jobs for white, poorly educated, middle-age Americans is not only destroying their livelihoods and marriages, but also their lives, two Princeton University economists argue in a paper released Thursday.

The mortality rate for whites with no more than a high school degree was about 30 percent higher than for blacks in 2015, according to the report, to be presented at the Brookings Institution on Friday. That’s a huge increase from 1999, when the mortality rate for this group of whites was about 30 percent lower than for blacks.

“This is a story of the collapse of the white working class,” said Angus Deaton, who co-wrote the paper with Anne Case. “The labor market has very much turned against them,” he told The New York Times.

Case and Deaton first noted the increase in mortality among middle-aged whites with high school educations in 2015. Their new report found that the trend has not abated over the past two years, and there’s been no reduction in what they call “deaths of despair” ― including those caused by suicide, drugs and alcohol.

The authors wrote that increases in deaths of despair are accompanied by a measurable deterioration in the economic and social well-being of whites lacking college education.

“It’s not just their careers that have gone down the tubes, but their marriage prospects, their ability to raise children,” Deaton told the Times. “That’s the kind of thing that can lead people to despair.”

The new study found that the highest mortality rates from drugs, alcohol and suicide among whites ages 45 to 54 are no longer limited geographically. In 2000, these deaths were centered in the Southwest. By the mid-2000s, they had spread to Appalachia, Florida, and the West Coast. Today, they are nationwide.

The trend affects whites of both sexes. Education level is significant because people with a college degree report better health and greater happiness than those who never attended. And while the death rate for whites without a college degree is rising, the rate for whites who are college graduates has dropped, Case and Deaton found.

Less-educated white Americans who struggle in the job market in early adulthood are likely to experience a “cumulative disadvantage” over time, according to the study.

“Ultimately, we see our story as about the collapse of the white, high-school-educated working class after its heyday in the early 1970s, and the pathologies that accompany that decline,” they concluded.

The research also speaks to the story of Donald Trump’s ascent to the presidency. Trump won widespread support among whites with only a high school diploma, suggesting that this demographic saw him as a savior for their struggles.

Deaton pointed out to The Times that Trump’s first months as president have presented those supporters with a cruel twist, singling out the Republican health care legislation, which Trump supports.

“The policies that you see seem almost perfectly designed to hurt the very people who voted for him,” Deaton told the Times.

Reversing mortality trends that in many cases began in the 1970s could take years, the study said ― regardless of Trump’s policies. But some immediate steps could help. Deaton told the Times that routine prescriptions for opioids should be curbed, for example. More than 30,000 Americans died of opioid overuse in 2015.


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/deaths-of-despair-white-americans_us_58d3e14de4b0f838c6301604?of
 
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From Austin oil to Seattle aviation, China’s ties with US run regional and deep

US President Donald Trump says Beijing has too tight a grip on the American economy, but city and state leaders across the nation want an even closer relationship

PUBLISHED : Friday, 31 March, 2017, 12:02am
UPDATED : Friday, 31 March, 2017, 12:02am

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If US President Donald Trump gets confrontational with Chinese President Xi Jinping over trade at their Mar-a-Lago summit in Florida in April, the Chinese leader will have potential allies in some surprising places – namely, Austin, Sacramento and Olympia.

The economic ties that bind China to the United States are primarily regional and run deep. Now, with a wild card in the White House, the Chinese want even more leverage should bilateral trade relations get hammered. China’s Ministry of Commerce says it’s working to expand various investment agreements with California, Texas, Iowa and other states, deals it estimates were worth US$2.5 billion to American and Chinese businesses last year alone.

What to expect from Xi-Trump summit

Sun Jiwen, a spokesman for the ministry, used an old Chinese saying to describe the trade situation: “A good relationship between two nations is based on close connection between their peoples,” Sun said. “Province-state and intercity economic partnerships provide an important foundation for China-US economic ties.”

While the outreach is a continuation of regional ties promoted for several years by Xi, it’s taken on added urgency as Trump’s economic team weighs whether to follow through on campaign-trail promises of tariffs of as much as 45 per cent on Chinese goods.

Part of the thinking is that making more American friends outside Washington could slow the push for protectionist measures, according to a person involved in the ministry’s campaign, who asked not to be identified discussing its internal deliberations.

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If such cooperation flourishes, “it will not be easy for anyone to shake,” says He Weiwen, a former ministry official who’s now deputy director of the Beijing-based Centre for China and Globalisation.

Attention has focused on the massive trade deficit in trade of goods with China – US$347 billion last year, almost half of the US total. But China, with its 1.37 billion people, is also among the top three export markets for 33 states.

Texas oil and gas producers, Michigan carmakers and Georgia paper mills would all suffer if China were to impose import restrictions in response to American tariffs. China has also ramped up its investments in the US, by one estimate, they tripled last year to US$45.6 billion – which helps create the jobs Trump has promised.

Ahead of Xi-Trump summit, what China should do to get ties with the US on an even keel

US-China trade ties aren’t solely between Beijing and the White House. They’re forged in places like Moraine, Ohio, where American workers are employed by Fuyao Glass, a Chinese-owned company that bought part of a shuttered General Motors plant in 2014. Many of China’s cross-border investments are welcomed locally and aren’t the kind of deals that draw scrutiny from the US government, which reviews foreign purchases for national security concerns.

In Lancaster, California, a desert town north of Los Angeles hit hard by the financial crisis, the Republican mayor, R. Rex Parris, in 2008 began courting the Chinese electric vehicle maker BYD Company, which is part-owned by Warren Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway.

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“Saved our city,” he says of BYD’s electric bus plant in Lancaster. BYD now employs almost 500 people there and anticipates tripling that within three years. “I’m telling people, ‘you’re going to have to not want a job to not have one,’” says Parris, who expects the local unemployment rate to drop to 2 per cent.

The Ministry of Commerce began formalising the provincial-state ties in 2012, when Xi visited the US and talked with governors including Iowa’s Terry Branstad, an old friend from a 1980s cultural exchange, about boosting trade opportunities.

California, Texas, Iowa, Michigan, New York, the state of Washington and the city of Chicago have since signed agreements with the ministry, calling for regular trade visits, business matchmaking and other exchanges. The deals cover 25 Chinese provinces and cities, which sent 22 delegations to the US last year while the US organised 14 trips to China, according to the ministry.

Officials and executives from Shanghai made two visits last year to Chicago, which helped convince the popcorn maker Garrett Popcorn to choose the city for its first store in mainland China, according to a statement from Shanghai’s commerce commission.

Trump needs his best sales skills for summit with Xi Jinping

In the manufacturing hub of Guangdong, officials plan a slate of cooperative activities this year, among them setting up a regional trade office in Los Angeles, hosting a biotech delegation from Massachusetts and sending representatives to an “Invest in America” summit sponsored by the US Chamber of Commerce, the Guangdong Commerce Department said in a written statement.

Bob Honts, the owner of Texas Lone Star Enterprises in Austin, Texas, accompanied Texas Governor Rick Perry on a trade mission to China in 2014. Honts, whose company raises investment money under the EB-5 visa programme, says Chinese immigrants have put US$200 million into real estate, oil exploration and other ventures in the state.

As Trump and Xi prepare to meet, an opportunity for a Sino-US grand deal presents itself

“To ignore the Chinese is like you’ve got this race car and you’re using three cylinders out of eight,” says Honts, a Republican. “You can’t do that. We need to work with China.”

Trump hasn’t resolved tension in his administration between hardline advisers like Stephen Bannon, who has called for “economic nationalism”, and such moderate voices as Branstad, who’s now slated to become Trump’s ambassador to China.

Few companies have more to lose from a trade war than Boeing, which makes most of its commercial jetliners in Washington state and has collected US$60.2 billion from deliveries to China since 2000, according to data compiled by Bloomberg Intelligence. That far outweighs the US$800 million to US$1 billion that Boeing spends a year on aircraft parts made in China, joint ventures and other operations.

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At Boeing Field in Seattle, many of the 737s lined up for testing are Chinese domestic carriers. But if would-be Chinese buyers get caught in the middle of a trade war, “they will simply buy Airbus”, says Gary Locke, a former governor of the state who was also ambassador to China under former president Barack Obama.

The state’s director of commerce, Brian Bonlender, is in China this week in preparation for a visit from provincial officials that had been planned for June but now has been pushed back to September and a planned trade mission led by Washington Governor Jay Inslee in August.

Bonlender says his counterparts at the ministry in China have been more “engaged” and “helpful” since Trump’s election – and seem especially focused on finding Chinese businesses with advanced ideas for investment projects and bringing them to the state’s attention. “We’re very encouraged” by the increased outreach, Bonlender says, adding that it’s likely due in part to the “changing tenor of international engagement” under Trump.

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...-seattle-aviation-chinas-ties-us-run-regional
 
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if so, it only means the incompetence of middle aged white men. nobody has a claim on how he wants to be paid. how he is paid only depends on how others are willing to pay him.
 
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15 years ago, in bay area, 100k household income is considered low income and some real estate agents dedicated to help such families.

That just shows when people point at poverty rates in the US they don't take into consideration what people's definition of poverty is. It can be outlandish.

The UN definition of poverty is $1.90/day
In the US the minimum wage is $7.25/hr.
That means a 16yr old teen can flip burgers for less than two hours a week in the US and not be considered in poverty by the UN. But unlike most of the world (which includes China with their 700M out of poverty by making a paltry $1.90/day) we don't measure poverty that way. In the US it is at a minimum $33/day. In many places in the US it is much higher. It is scary that some young high school dropout in a rural McDonalds in Mississippi in 2 hours is making more than a large percentage of the population in China.
 
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http://www.civicdashboards.com/city/mountain-view-ca-16000US0649670/median_household_income

View attachment 395309
This is a pretty well-off city. Name one city in China or Malaysia with income like this. If you don't own a house there and think you can just drive over and rent you are going to end up paying top dollar.
Americans don't care for their poor. They believe random market forces will magically fix the homeless. Better spend those tax payers money to liberate other people nation.
 
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Americans don't care for their poor. They believe random market forces will magically fix the homeless. Better spend those tax payers money to liberate other people nation.

Well you may as well feel sorry for all us "poor people" who can't afford to live in Beverly Hills next door to a movie star. Mountain View is a very expensive suburb (oh yeah that word you guys equate with being useless) where lots of high tech companies have moved to which is outside the big cities of San Jose and San Francisco. The median home price in Mountain View is well over $1 million and is actually more than both San Jose and San Francisco.

Screen Shot 2017-05-07 at 9.34.44 PM.jpg

Google's sprawling suburban Headquarters in Mountain View, California.
 
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Americans don't care for their poor. They believe random market forces will magically fix the homeless. Better spend those tax payers money to liberate other people nation.
No money for wall building!
but they burn money on bombs and killing civilians around the world, no wonder they are drown in debt
 
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Who says China is killing white man? Putting the jobless white man to job - before Trump is ousted/impeached - is important.

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Surging Chinese investment brings more jobs to local Americans
Xinhua | Updated: 2017-05-18

NEW YORK - For Rachel McGaw, an office manager who lives in a US rust-belt town of Illinois, working for a Chinese company is more rewarding than a US one.

"I enjoy working here. I like my salary, I like my hours. I feel more valued because the company takes me and my feeling and my family into consideration," said the employee at Wanxiang New Energy, the solar division of Wanxiang America Corporation.

More investment more jobs

McGaw is just one of thousands of local workers employed at Wanxiang who would otherwise be jobless.

The corporation entered the US market in 1994, the year General Motors went to China to start their operations in China.

It now has 28-plus plants, runs in more than 20 sates in the United States, and employs more than 18,000 people. Only about 10 employees are dispatched from China, and the rest are all local.

Over the years, Wanxiang has acquired many firms on the brink of bankruptcy, Ni Pin, president of Wanxiang America, said, "we saved a lot of jobs."

While China and job losses are discussed as one and the same by certain parties on Capitol Hill, the reality could not be more different. Chinese companies are opening new plants and hiring people in America - a scenario largely absent from the rhetoric of some US politicians.

Chinese companies now employ more than 140,000 Americans, according to the latest report released by the National Committee on US-China Relations (NCUSCR) and Rhodium Group.

Already on a steep growth trajectory for the past five years, Chinese investment in the United States jumped to $46 billion last year, a 200-percent increase from the previous record of $15 billion set in 2015, the newly updated report on China's US investments showed.

In addition, the report named "New Neighbors 2017" showed that by the end of 2016, 425 out of 435 Congressional Districts hosted Chinese-owned companies.

In 2016, Chinese investors further expanded and deepened their footprint in the United Sates, according to a separate report released on Wednesday by NCUSCR and Rhodium Group.

US coastal states, such as New York and California were still the major beneficiaries of Chinese investment, while South and Midwest states also received significant Chinese investment last year.

In New York, the Alexander Hamilton Bridge that crosses the Harlem river has gone through a major widening and rehabilitating project done by China Construction America. The 550-foot-long steel arch main bridge now carries 10 lanes of traffic instead of eight, with its support piers and foundations reinforced and new drainage installed.

The Chinese construction company started its business in the United States in 2000 with only 12 employees and less than $10 million of annual revenue.

In 2016, it employed around 2,000 workers, 98 percent of whom are Americans. Its revenue jumped to $2 billion.

In Moraine, Ohio, more than 2,000 people are working at a nearly 470,000-square-meter glass fabrication factory housed in General Motors' former assembly plant.

The plant used to employ thousands of people making SUVs and trucks, but was closed in 2008 as a financial crisis wiped out jobs across the industry.

Fuyao is one of the world's largest auto glass makers and has a 22-percent market share in the United States. Its investment in Moraine is the largest Chinese investment in Ohio history and the eighth-largest direct foreign investment in the United States over the last decade.

As it expands its market in the country, it will create more manufacturing jobs. And these jobs are certainly needed in the Midwest.

Rebirth of community

Stephen A. Orlins, president of the National Committee on US - China Relations, was quite emotional when recalling the factory's grand opening.

He said it signaled the rebirth of a community and at the moment he knew he had glimpsed "the promised land of a constructive US -China relations."

Chinese companies in the United States are bridging bilateral economic ties and cultural exchanges in their own ways.

In addition to creating job opportunities for local Americans, Wanxiang also makes sure that every penny the company makes in the United Sates will be invested into local community.

"In our company there are four stakeholders, shareholder, employee, customer and local community," said Ni.

He said Wanxiang has always embraced globalization and that the company has contributed immensely to prosperity of local communities.

Drawing on Wanxiang's experience, Ni said globalization brings more opportunities for growth and development in local communities, rather than damaging local economy as some have feared.

Fuyao, on the other hand, pair Chinese employees with American employees for them to learn languages and exchange ideas and techniques. The company also invited American employees to visit its plants in China.

"Bilateral investment is a cultural as well as economic bridge between countries because it makes commerce a platform for the exchange of ideas," said Orlins on Wednesday at an event for the release of the report named "Two-Way Street: 2017 Update US - China direct Investment Trends."

"What used to be a one-way street - with money flowing predominantly from the United States to China - is now a two-way highway with tens of billions of dollars in annual FDI flowing in each direction," said the report.

According to the report, the cumulative value of US FDI transactions in China reached over $240 billion by the end of 2016, while the cumulative Chinese FDI in the US totaled $110 billion in the same period.
 
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The irony. America can rrsolve unemployment issues if they allow chinese companies to purchase american companies. Canadians hate America control companies. Their CEO's idea is to eliminate jobs and give himself a bonus.


True. Its middle aged 1% white american killing the 99% white american.

By slowing down China's acquisitions, US white elite indirectly kill US white middle class.

These white guys won't be doing jobs the colored minorities are doing. White middle class man cannot dominate indecent jobs. They need decent jobs.

China offers them a win win solution. The conditions won't be getting better for white man.
 
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By slowing down China's acquisitions, US white elite indirectly kill US white middle class.

These white guys won't be doing jobs the colored minorities are doing. White middle class man cannot dominate indecent jobs. They need decent jobs.

China offers them a win win solution. The conditions won't be getting better for white man.
Even if they wanted these lower end jobs they don't qualify for it. White middle aged workibg class americans will die faster than blacks
 
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I think the white middle class lost the ability of the founding slave owner fathers. Once they were well qualified, healthy and ambitious.

I think the way US demographic evolved slowed down the evolution of middle class whites. In the end, the vitality factor has been transformed to the minorities.

It may be a shock to the white middle class man, but they are not receiving no less welfare checks than the minorities.
Drugs, pot, and alcohol is killing WASP, In Canada only WASP panhandle. In America, only BLACKs and Whites panhandle. Panhandle-asking for donation nicely, a form of begging.
 
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