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- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Path: sparky!uunet!noc.near.net!gateway!miki!boba
- From: boba@miki.pictel.com (Bob Alexander)
- Subject: Re: Why memory costs doubled
- Message-ID: <1992Dec29.140634.3917@miki.pictel.com>
- Organization: PictureTel Corporation
- References: <BzzID0.1zC@fc.hp.com> <1992Dec28.201619.12518@wam.umd.edu> <louis.725593533@aupair.cs.athabascau.ca>
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 14:06:34 GMT
- Lines: 66
-
- >In 1857, when the competition between Japan and the United States began,
- >the shogun's adviser, Masayoshi Hotta, observed:
- >
- > ... and so gradually subject
- > the foreigners to our influence until in the end all the
- > countries of the world know the blessings of perfect tranquility
- > and our hegemony is acknowledged throughout the world.
-
- I suppose that, since 1857, no advisor to the U.S. president has ever said
- anything that would sound sinister to foreigners? Let's not blame the
- Japanese for protecting their own interests when we do the same.
-
- >When the occupation ended in the early 1950s, and MITI was formed, the
- >strategy was to use trade to establish the hegemony. They have almost
- >succeeded where the Imperial Army and Navy failed.
-
- MITI is treated as a demi-god, but it has failed as often as it has
- succeeded. Japan has failed in its attempts to improve its
- aeronautics and agriculture industries despite decades of trying.
- MITI has given very bad advice to Honda and Sony. Even in the areas
- where Japanese companies have succeeded, MITI had little if any
- involvement.
-
- The story of Japan's memory dumping is not quite what the popular
- media makes of it. I followed events very closely as they were
- happening. U.S. companies were unable to match the prices of
- Japanese competitors, so they charged the Japanese with dumping. The
- U.S. gov't demanded that Japanese companies fork over usually
- confidential financial information. The companies that refused got
- slapped with extremely high import duties until they complied (can you
- say "extortion?")
-
- Japanese companies amortize costs over a longer period than U.S.
- companies, which allows them to recoup their costs more slowly and
- thus appear to be "dumping." (Is it dumping, or is it long term
- planning of the type that U.S. industry lacks?) When the U.S. gov't
- got the information, they applied U.S. accounting rules to the raw
- data and ruled that the Japanese were breaking the law. The U.S.
- imposed "voluntary" (under the threat of penalties) price controls on
- DRAM. This was a windfall for Japanese companies. The prices were
- initially very high, but they were to be revised quarterly. (Note that
- these were price controls, not tariffs, so the money went to the Japanese
- companies.)
-
- The next two quarters, the fixed price dropped precipitously,
- suggesting that the original fixed prices were out of line. After
- that, the U.S. gov't stopped announcing publicly the fixed price. My
- guess is that they were too embarrassed to admit how wrong they were.
-
- The U.S. gov't is not an impartial judge of trade disputes. Just because
- it accuses (and convicts) a foreign country of dumping, doesn't mean it's
- true. Nor is it an impartial sentencer. Just because it imposes duties
- and protects a politically powerful interest group, doesn't mean it's
- good for the country. We've seen this over and over again with steel,
- automobiles, textiles, oil, LCDs, food, etc. Protectionism always hurts
- the consumer, rarely helps the protected industry, and has negative
- secondary effects on other industries (e.g. tariffs on steel hurt the
- automotive industry, tariffs on RAM and LCDs hurt the computer industry.)
-
- Bob Alexander boba@pictel.com
- The more the government does, the better libertarianism looks
- -----------------------------------------------------------------
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