x*****u 发帖数: 3419 | 1 It feels like everything we buy comes from China. In fact, less than 3
percent of personal spending in the U.S. goes to China, according to a new
report from the SF Fed.
That's partly because most personal spending goes to things like health care
and housing that are, by definition, produced in the U.S.
But even when you look at the "goods" category, Americans spend way more on
stuff that's made in the U.S. than on stuff that's made in China.
For the big-ticket items in the durable goods category (cars, furniture, etc
.), about two thirds of personal spending goes to stuff made in the U.S.
Just over 10 percent goes to China.
For smaller stuff — food, clothes, gas, etc. — 76 percent of personal
spending goes to goods made in the U.S., and 6 percent goes to goods made in
China.
If all that's true, why does it feel like everything we buy is made in China?
Three possibilities come to mind (though I'm sure there are others).
1. We buy a lot of cheap stuff from China. So we notice the volume of stuff,
but not the fact that it accounts for a small chunk of our overall spending.
Of all the subcategories the report breaks out, "clothing/shoes" is the only
one where we spend more on Chinese goods than on U.S. goods. But clothing
and shoes accounts for only 3.4 percent of our total spending.
2. We're always hearing about our big trade deficit with China. In May, for
example, our exports to China totaled $7 billion , and our imports from
China totaled $29 billion. That is indeed a big deficit. But that $29
billion in imports is tiny compared with the overall size of the U.S.
economy: Our economic output is well over $1 trillion per month.
3. U.S. manufacturing jobs have been disappearing for years. But that doesn'
t mean the U.S. manufacturing industry is disappearing. U.S. manufacturing
is growing over the long term — but it's shifting more and more into high-
tech systems that don't require factories full of assembly-line workers.
Note: When I say "personal spending," I mean personal consumption
expenditures, a category that accounts for about two-thirds of the U.S.
economy.
http://www.npr.org/blogs/money/2011/08/10/139388532/only-a-tiny |
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