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Entries from March 1, 2017 - March 31, 2017

From the Frontline

"Despite the fact that I loathe group work, this capstone pushes us to ensure that the team comes first. Our success or failure comes from our ability to make the team, beyond our selves,  the priority. As a unit we collaborate to ensure that the team has what is required to see the mission through to completion."

Posted on Sunday, March 26, 2017 at 09:26AM by Registered CommenterJames Drogan | CommentsPost a Comment

Energy and Productivity

Is it reasonable that “Most analysts think that global demand for energy will increase in the near future (When Renewables Replace Fossil Fuels. (n.d.). Retrieved March 25, 2017, from https://www.stratfor.com/image/when-renewables-replace-fossil-fuels) and that “...Haldane's broader perspective on global productivity growth, and on his intriguing argument that from a global perspective, most of the productivity slowdown can be attributed to a failure of innovation to diffuse across countries as rapidly as in the past” (Taylor, T. (2017, March 24). CONVERSABLE ECONOMIST: Global Productivity Growth: Diminishing Convergence. Retrieved from http://conversableeconomist.blogspot.com/2017/03/global-productivity-growth-diminishing.html) could be simultaneously true?
Posted on Saturday, March 25, 2017 at 07:08AM by Registered CommenterJames Drogan | CommentsPost a Comment

Another Hhhhhmmmmm

Posted on Sunday, March 19, 2017 at 02:38PM by Registered CommenterJames Drogan | CommentsPost a Comment

Technology and Work

From Mauldin, J. (2017, March 1). Tax Reform: The Good, the Bad, and the Really Ugly—Part Four.
 

"The problem is that at least 80% of manufacturing jobs were lost not to companies moving factories to China or Mexico but to increased automation. Some estimates run as high as 90%. Those jobs are never “coming back.” They are gone. And that trend is going to continue and accelerate. I fully understand that if we do get corporate tax reform, along with some other reforms, it is quite possible that Apple, for example, would move its iPhone 10 factory to the US. But iPhones are increasingly assembled by robots, and in a few years those and other such products will mostly be made on largely automated production lines, whether in China or the US.

That said, if Foxconn does set up a flat-screen display factory in the US, it would create 30,000+ jobs. Of course, they are asking for US government help and subsidies. Note that Apple has 766 suppliers, of which just 69 are in the US. Manufacturing iPhones in the US would be more about the logistics of getting just-in-time components from those other 700 suppliers, which are all over the world. The additional cost for US-based labor would not be all that much.

And that situation is playing out over hundreds of industries. Much of what we buy today is absolutely reliant on a complex, seamlessly functioning global supply chain. Did you know that an Apple iPhone contains about 75 elements, as in periodic table elements? There is iron, aluminum, carbon, and silicon, of course, but also a host of exotics. Most of those aren’t mined or refined in the United States."

 

Posted on Saturday, March 4, 2017 at 06:32AM by Registered CommenterJames Drogan | CommentsPost a Comment

Schools and universities will have to do more to educate students to be better consumers of information.

Shafik, M. (2017, March 1). Restoring Trust in Expertise. Retrieved March 1, 2017, from https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/restoring-trust-in-experts-by-minouche-shafik-2017-03
Posted on Wednesday, March 1, 2017 at 06:43AM by Registered CommenterJames Drogan | CommentsPost a Comment