I have made my contribution towards a resounding yes-vote win out of a deep-seated longtime-held conviction that manufacturing remains of the essence.
As long as the social, economic and development paradigm that got built is geared to consumption of goods (and services) it won't ever become indifferent where those goods are manufactured in part or in full.
Indeed it is no mere coincidence that economies performing strongest in the wake of the latest finance-triggered slump of 2009 are those that retained a sizable manufacturing base throughout.
How else could it have been?
It only takes each one to look around and identify the durable goods we live on, big and small.
The countries supplying them have entered our lives permanently. Importantly, they created tangible wealth in their respective economies.
An economy may succeed without manufacturing for a given period but I fail to see how it can sustain itself growing soundly over a longer run.
A balanced mix would be the best make-up of any economy anywhere with strong primary and secondary sector inputs highly valued.
Broadly, the tertiary sector would then process riches generated in the first two.
From the eighties on Anglo-Saxon type capitalism favoured financial services with the UK in particular, and the USA, embracing it wholeheartedly.
I believe this cycle was shattered by the 2009 debacle that pretty much brought to an end a time of over-reliance on the rightly-called paper economy.
Even if a resurgence in manufacturing is not witnessed in countries that drifted away from it, their relative vulnerability is now starkly exposed.
As long as I need a chair to sit on - so does everybody else - it won't be irrelevant, ever, where that chair is made. In part or in full.
High time for manufacturing to kick in once again.
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