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The Apple Connection
Ever since the beginning of the current global economic crisis, the focus of both critical analysis and public odium has been speculative capital. In the populist narrative, it was the breathtaking shenanigans of the banks in an atmosphere of deregulation that led to the economic collapse. The “financial economy,” characterized as parasitic and bad, was contrasted to the “real economy,” which was said to produce real goods and real value. Resources flowed into speculative activities in finance, resulting in a loss of dynamism in the real economy and eventually leading to credit cutoff at the height of the crisis, causing bankruptcies and massive layoffs.
Vampire Squid versus Corporate Galahad?
The principal villain in this narrative is Goldman Sachs. The image of this Wall Street denizen has been etched in the public mind by Matt Taibbi’s description of it as “a great vampire squid wrapped around the face of humanity, relentlessly jamming its blood funnel into anything that smells like money.”
In this account, the old nemesis of the progressive analysts, the transnational corporation (TNC), slips quietly into the background. Indeed, it is seen as part of the real economy, as the commonly used term “non-financial corporation” implies. In contrast to the investment banks that create fictitious products like derivatives, TNCs are said to create real products like Apple’s nifty iPads and iPhones. While Goldman Sachs is pictured as a vampire squid, Apple is depicted as a corporate Galahad that can be relied on to deliver the consumer’s wildest desires. In one survey, 56 percent of Americans associated nothing negative with Apple.
A recent two-part series in the New York Times on Apple, however, reminds us that transnational corporations and their practice of outsourcing jobs are front-and-center when it comes to the current economic crisis. And it is not only “smokestack” corporations like GM and Boeing that have massively shifted work from the United States to cheap labor havens abroad, but also those involved in the knowledge industry. Indeed, the highest proportion of firms with an offshoring strategy belongs to the information technology and software development industries. But while HP and Dell have become associated with outsourcing, Apple’s prowess at turning out products that capture the popular imagination has kept it from being tainted with the image of being a labor exporter.
Apple and Outsourcing
Apple earned over $400,000 in profit per employee in 2011, more than Goldman Sachs or Exxon. Yet in the last few years, it has created few jobs in its home base and prime market, the United States. According to the Times account, “Apple employs 43,000 people in the United States and 20,000 overseas, a small fraction of the over 400,000 American workers at General Motors in the 1950s, or the hundreds of thousands at General Electric in the 1980s. Many more people work for Apple’s contractors: an additional 700,000 people engineer, build and assemble iPads, iPhones and Apple’s other products. But almost none of them work in the United States. Instead, they work for foreign companies in Asia, Europe and elsewhere, at factories that almost all electronics designers rely upon to build their wares. “
The genesis of the financial crisis, in fact, cannot be separated from the strategic moves of “real economy” actors like Apple. Their readiness to leave their home base and home market was one of the central causes of the crisis. The creation of credit was the central link between this trend in the real economy and the dynamics of finance. Before we examine this link, however, it is important to review some facts about outsourcing.
It is estimated that 8 million U.S. manufacturing jobs were eliminated between June 1979 and December 2009. One report describes the grim process of deindustrialization: “Long before the banking collapse of 2008, such important U.S. industries as machine tools, consumer electronics, auto parts, appliances, furniture, telecommunications equipment, and many others that had once dominated the global marketplace suffered their own economic collapse. Manufacturing employment dropped to 11.7 million in October 2009, a loss of 5.5 million or 32 percent of all manufacturing jobs since October 2000. The last time fewer than 12 million people worked in the manufacturing sector was in 1941. In October 2009, more people were officially unemployed (15.7 million) than were working in manufacturing.”
Outsourcing and Stagnation in the Real Economy
This decimation of the manufacturing sector, which involved the elimination a massive number of well-paying manufacturing jobs, played a central role in the stagnation of income, wages, and purchasing power in the United States. In the three decades prior to the crash of 2008, Robert Reich notes, the wages of the typical American hardly increased, and actually dropped in the 2000s.
This stagnation of income posed a threat to both business and the state. To the first, the slow growth of demand would translate into overproduction and, thus, diminished profits in the corporations’ key market. To the state, it posed the specter of rising social conflict and instability.
The threat of a stagnant market was thwarted—temporarily—by the private sector via a massive increase in credit creation by banks, who lowered lending standards and hooked millions of consumers into multiple credit cards, with a great deal of the funds lent sourced from China and other capital-exporting Asian economies. Credit kept consumption up and fueled the boom in the 1990s and the middle of the first decade of the 21st century.
Washington tried to ward off political resentment by adopting a strategy of “populist credit expansion,” that is, making easy credit for housing available for low-income groups via Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. Political stability was not the only outcome of this approach; it was accompanied by greater profitability for speculative capital. As Raghuram Rajan writes, “As more money from the government flooded into financing or supporting low income housing, the private sector joined the party. After all, they could do the math, and they understood that the political compulsions behind government actions would not disappear quickly. With agency support, subprime mortgages would be liquid, and low-cost housing would increase in price. Low risk and high return—what more could the private sector desire?”
The Apple-China Connection
Co-opting the masses with credit expansion collapsed with the financial implosion of 2008. Today, millions of Americans are both without jobs and in terrible debt. But, as the continuing high unemployment rate indicates, the export of jobs continues unabated, and China remains the favored destination.
Part of the reason South China retains its primacy as an investment site is that Chinese suppliers, with subsidies from the state, have established an unbeatable supply chain of contiguous factories, radically bringing down transport costs, enabling rapid assembly of an iPad or iPhone, and thus satisfying customers in a highly competitive market in record time.
Steve Jobs, the legendary founder of Apple, played a key role in creating this system. Apple executives recount his wanting a glass screen for the iPhone that could not be scratched, and his wanting it in “six weeks.” After one executive left that meeting, says the Times, he booked a flight to China. “If Mr. Jobs wanted perfect,” he recalled, “there was nowhere else to go. “
Mastery of the economics of the supply chain is, however, only one of the reasons Jobs and Apple favored China. The central reason continued to be cheap labor that is disciplined by the state. What emerges in the Times account about Apple’s practices is that, despite its protestations about being a socially responsible firm, Apple bargains hard, allowing its contractors “only the slimmest of profits.” Thus, “suppliers often try to cut corners, replace expensive chemicals with less costly alternatives, or push their employees to work faster and longer. “The only way you make money working for Apple is figuring out how to do things more efficiently or cheaper,” said an executive at one company that helped bring the iPad to market. “And then they’ll come back the next year, and force a 10 percent price cut.” Not surprisingly, a number of Apple suppliers have been plagued with accidents, including explosions, since, as one former Apple executive put it, “If you squeeze margins, you’re forcing them to cut safety.”
The consequences of severe cost-cutting have not only been accidents but also protests by workers. Some of them took the tragic route of suicide, such as those that occurred in 2009 and 2010 at Foxconn, a notorious, gigantic corporate contractor, while others resorted to spontaneous labor actions that were put down forcefully by management and the state.
Apple’s products are top of the line, distinguished by their superior design, engineering, and personality or “soul.” But the company’s march to market supremacy has been accomplished at tremendous cost to both American and Chinese workers. The iPad and iPhone are engineering masterpieces. But these commodities are not simply material. They also incarnate the social relations of production. They are the expression of the marriage between a demanding enterprise that has become the cutting edge corporation of our time and what Slavoj Zizek has called today’s “ideal capitalist state”: China, with the freedom it offers capital along with its unparalleled capacity to discipline labor. One cannot but agree with Jared Bernstein, a former White House economic adviser, when he told the Times, “If it’s [the Apple system] the pinnacle of capitalism, we should be worried.”
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29 Comments so far
Show AllThe recent exposes concerning Apples chinese workforce has been quite an eyeopener. I do use an iMac but would never buy a new one again. Our votes don't matter for much anymore, but how we spend our money still does.
The last used iMac I bought was from a guy of Haitian decent who was raising money to send to the island after the big earthquake. Im glad that the money I spent helped someone, instead of going into Apples offshore bank accounts that does little good for real people.
Goldman Sacs has been referred to as the Vampire Squid of corporations, but what about Apple? I just read another article that said Apple has around $80 billion in cash reserves and that could rise to $136 billion by the end of 2012. That is money just sucked out of the world economy, that sits in some offshore account. And that huge cash reserve is there because of offshored American jobs, and miserable Chinese working conditions.
This gives quite an insight into the goal of the bastards that run the average multinational corporation. The ultimate goal is to have a low paid workforce living in dormatories on the factory grounds, that can be worked long hours and are on call to work 24/7 as demand for product changes. And all this so they can amass large amounts of money that just sits in some offshore bank account.
Knowing all this, how can anyone look at an iPhone and think it's so slick, (maybe the "L" in that last word needs to go...)
NC TOM, Apple is not the only computer company doing business in China. If you decide to buy a PC instead, you will be getting the same shit from the same places.
I have been a Mac user my whole life.
Yes, I am upset about their practices, but I have a 25 yo mac that still works.
My friend gave me her 5 yo PC when she upgraded and it doesn't work.
Don't cut off your nose...
I'm tired of the "tech pragmatism" argument, represented in this comment. You might be able to argue similarly about the iPhone vs. some competitor - and would you still argue this, knowing how much Apple abuses labor for the sake of its investors to create the damn things? If you rationalize it by saying the others are "just as bad" or something similar, and that Apple's products last longer, you haven't been paying attention, or your moral force is really lacking.
I'll be staying with Macs, but will buy used ones.
"That is money just sucked out of the world economy, that sits in some offshore account. And that huge cash reserve is there because of offshored American jobs, and miserable Chinese working conditions."
No, the vast majority of Apple's surplus is invested. Only about a quarter is "cash".
The reserve is there because Apple makes products people like and find useful. That's how you make money in manufacturing.
As for the miserable Chinese working conditions, you've drunk the Coolaide.
Apple forced FoxConn to double the pay of their workers last year. And the suicide rate of FoxConn workers is far lower than the Chinese average.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2012/01/30/the-apple-boycott-graphically-explained/
Now, change the laws in the US so corporations will no longer get tax breaks for leaving, and they'll build modern robotic factories here.
FoxConn has 30,000 engineers devoted to Apple products. We could use those jobs, for sure.
But until the tariffs on imports go up, Corporations will fight to keep their costs low in competition with each other.
Imagine Apple built all their own factories, spending about... say, $80 Billion Dollars !
Imagine that it cost them $15 more per iPhone to assemble them here.
Imagine Android phones now being $15 cheaper than the iPhone, people buying Droids instead, and Apple going out of the phone business two years later.
Level the playing field. Raise tariffs, and all the manufacturers will compete to build factories here. None of them dares do it alone.
the dear leader, the recently departed kim jong jobs is a modern day robber baron
earlier this week i posted a series of factoids about the anti-customer anti worker profile of this ghoul
from suicides in the chinese factories - now they place suicide nets around their buildings to catch them when they jump and now apple forces workers to sign pledges that they won't kill themselves at work - ya know you can't make this stuff up - but they did NOTHING to improve the work conditions or increase they pay for these slaves
in fact they want production increased - or else bub
john d rockefeller - who was the most hated man in amerika - would never have dreamed of being so ruthless. even the scumball jay gould would have had the balls to be so heartless
apple pays it's amerikan workers peanuts and they collude with other tech companies to depress wages
"You remember a few years back when Apple and Google were exposed as having an agreement not to poach each other’s employees? Well it seems there are some new companies which also took part in this handshake agreement not to steal employees. They are Pixar, Lucasfilm, Adobe, Intel, and Intuit. Next week a class-action civil lawsuit will be heard in San Jose regarding the matter.
Interestingly the agreements not only apply to poaching employees but declining to give offers to employees who applied.
There are a few reasons companies would do something like this. First they would want to keep talent which has been trained and productive. And they also would obviously not have to pay as high compensation levels if employees had a few less options.
While this is a pretty anti-employee move"
http://blog.tmcnet.com/blog/rich-tehrani/apple/google-apple-no-poach-antitrust-lawsuit-expands.html
the robber barons who destroyed amerika in the 20th century are back parsed through the fawning corproate media
kim jong jobs, kim jong gates, kim jong schneider
all hail the great leaders
"They are Pixar, Lucasfilm, Adobe, Intel, and Intuit. Next week a class-action civil lawsuit will be heard in San Jose regarding the matter." -- medmedude
Thanks for this piece of information. I can't recall ever running across this class-action suit in any of my reading. BTW -- I am NOT surprised! Thanks for the link.
"but they did NOTHING to improve the work conditions or increase they pay for these slaves"
You are ignorant. Apple required FoxConn to double employee wages. And has leaned on them to improve conditions.
"apple pays it's amerikan workers peanuts and they collude with other tech companies to depress wages"
Not only are you a poor speller, you lie as well. Apple pays a good wage to their American employees. The retirement package is described as "average", that could use some improvement.
==In the populist narrative, it was the breathtaking shenanigans of the banks in an atmosphere of deregulation that led to the economic collapse. The “financial economy,” characterized as parasitic and bad, was contrasted to the “real economy,” which was said to produce real goods and real value.==
Good try. The United States was subjected to serial THEFT - not merely allowed but encouraged & abetted by consecutive occupants of the Executive Office.
It began in the Reagan administration with the Savings & Loan scandal, and the Gipper's license to cronies to steal everything that was not nailed down. Their weapon was Law.
That, however, left a lot of nailed down stuff. The second assault wave - ignored by tumescent Congresses - came in with claw hammer and crow bars and, laughing, stole everything nailed down - leaving a hollow shell with ceilings, floors, and stairs. Shouldn't that be enough theft from the American People by now?
Nope. The third wave of angry looters got inside and, stupidly, began ripping out ceilings and floors because THEY WANTED THEIR'S too. In 2008 the looters began to hear noises that portended trouble. In September the financial infrastructure collapsed and the crooks all fell to the basement. They began sobbing their hearts out and we dried their tears with million dollar bills.
I scoff at self-serving definitions of capitalism. Capitalism is a Trade, with a set of skills that constitute a Craft. The goal of the craft is transfer of material wealth from the planet's weak to the planets' strong. We can imagine wealth being transported daily inside armored Brink's trucks. Using their highly honed skills, Capitalists the world over get up each morning, spring a trap on some armored cars - perhaps killing drivers and guards - transfer the money to their own, private armored trucks, and go home, Masters of the Universe.
The later is a psychological self deception that they EARNED their pirated booty - - by SKILL, by TAKING RISK, by having only 2.1 CHILDREN, by supporting ORCHESTRAS and BALLET. If necessary, to keep their legitimate, hard won wealth from being confiscated by mobs of plebes, they will set up a banking system on the dark side of the moon. It's THEIR MONEY. They stole it fair and square.
That's my point of view, a subset of my belief that the experiment of Nature with H. sapiens is a failure of Himalayan magnitude.
Trylon
And Saint Jobs made a lot of his money through military contracts. In 2008, Apple bought P.A. Semi, a major manufacturer of chips for missiles for the US department of "defense." For a few weeks in April and May 2008 computer and business pundits debated whether the DOD would allow the purchase, because they feared Apple might cancel the contracts.
But no problem. Apple agreed to continue supplying the chips for the missiles to the tune of about $100 million a year.
Heartwarming patriotism. Ibomb Tunes.
So... because they didn't immediately cancel contracts that the US Department of Defense relied on, Apple is a warmonger?
And if they had canceled the contracts, they'd be unpatriotic, right?
Chips aren't guns. You can use them for any legitimate purpose. Should auto manufacturers be fined if someone uses one of their cars to rob a bank?
Read.
"Apple bought P.A. Semi, a major MANUFACTURER OF CHIPS FOR MISSILES [emphasis mine] for the US department of "defense.""
Apple knew what the chips would be used for.
Walden Bello has been a champion of the peasantry for a long time, and his contribution is enormous. It's a formidable task to break the classist trance on people that causes them to coo at elites and sneer at peasants. But Walden Bello has done at least as much as anyone else, in contemporary times.
Yet Walden is still writing in elite frames. Examples: "Going gaga" over Apple-Bite, and Rolling Stone. No doubt, "ivy-league" establishment professors will continue to teach elite frames to journalists to get them to "go gaga" and "attract attention". But I feel the crest of a new, permanent wave, coming on: The people are now ready for the frames of the future, the people's/peasant's frames, permanent frames.
In the peasant's frame, it's easy, not difficult, to associate Apple-Bite with Goldman Sacks. Easy because the people/peasants know that big is bad, because big is hierarchical. Hierarchy elevates one person's interest above another's. Apple-Bite's product innovations do not win on a TRULY level playing field. Instead, they win on a very elite field of market dominators. We all know that OPEN STANDARDS work, and thus, Apple-Bite, if it wants to TRULY serve the people, can move all of its "innovations" into the public domain, as they are conceived. This enables local economies to cooperate in delivering innovations to the people. The local economy brings the justice home, to the people. Each of Apple-Bites innovations are conceived many times over, by different people, independently. They are NEVER so unique as the kapitalists try to pretend. Redundancy has been nature's key for billions of years.
So assuming big is bad is a good assumption. The people find that when they assume big is bad, and thus give proper analysis, they find gratification in discovering good wherever it may be, and this gratification translates into benevolence. We find this to be a preferable outcome. In contrast, when the people assume big is good, and thus give inadequate analysis, they discover their wrists in shackles, and this translates into grief. We find this a miserable outcome. So the benevolent masses replace the benevolent dictator. Obviously, this was necessary. Because... current philosophies, such as Liberalism, FAILED.
Thus the people's frames result in proper analysis, which means proper stewardship of the society by/for the people, to achieve the people's agenda of universal equity/justice. Enjoy the process, people. It's yours.
" We all know that OPEN STANDARDS work"
So this is why there's an Open Source app better than PhotoShop, Indesign, Illustrator? Oh, wait. There aren't any Open Source apps better than those proprietary programs.
The Open Source movement is a fine thing. But it's not magic. If you expect a company to work on developing a product for years and then give it away, you're either nuts or Google.
When Google gave away Android OS, they knew they were stealing patented features from Apple. It wasn't THEIR hard work they gave away. If they'd stuck to that, Android would have been crude, like DOS was crude. And sales would have suffered.
The point of Android OS was to create a rival platform Apple didn't control, so Google could sell mobile advertising without worrying that someday, Apple might, just possibly, decide they didn't like Google anymore.
Not to be an apologist for Steve Jobs but there are a few things that need to be taken into consideration for the movement of work to China. Jobs met with Obama and urged him to train more American engineers. He said he needed 30,000 engineers on-site to support 700,000 factory workers and that you can't find that many in America to hire. Jobs told Obama that if he could educate these engineers in tech schools, community colleges or trade schools, Apple could move more manufacturing plants to the U.S. He also advised the President that education had to be transformed to meet modern day needs and that teachers needed to be treated as professionals, not as industrial assembly-line workers. All valid points.
There have been complaints for some time in the U.S. of the challenges facing the engineering community. Part of the problem has been the lack of investment in infrastructure that decimated the demand for engineering skills. That infrastructure deficit is now coming home to haunt communities and gearing up to fix it is going to take some time and a significant investment, partly in the training of a new cohort of engineers. Those who work in the information technology field are more able to find employment although they have stiff competition from India and China. Math and science skills need to be enhanced as a precursor to further education in engineering in general.
If we’re going to bash the manufacturing sector, there is no better target than Walmart – a company that has hollowed out companies and communities across the US and elsewhere, and perfected the bargaining tools for lower prices that have become commonplace. How about Nike’s ethic in South East Asia? To put the blame for the current mess on Apple is to make them a scapegoat – the fall guy for a lot of other very bad actors. If Apple disappeared, would workers in China suddenly be emancipated? And is this kind of treatment something that has just happened since Apple moved overseas? Anyone who has been following human rights issues knows this is not the case.
Again, I would like to stress that I am not an apologist for Jobs; rather I would like to point out that Apple is part of a complex of issues that need to be sorted out. Taking them to task for their failure to fix the problems in their overseas factories is a good start.
Moonbeam: I agree with most of what you're saying here. It seems to me that there has been a purposeful attack on the education system in order to dumb-down the population into mindless, selfish serfs. The fact that the post-secondary education system is a for-profit system that saddles students with very high-debt levels seems extremely short sighted to me. If a country wants to be competitive in a high-tech market, don't you think they should educate their people? I've often said that post-secondary education should be free in order to expand the number of skilled workers.
That being said though, short-sightedness seems to be systemic in the US. They gut the manufacturing capacity, which allowed the massive growth in the middle class in the first place, they destroy the education system which causes the population to be quite a bit stupider, the refuse to provide a proper healthcare system, which causes the population to be less healthy and they provide very little in the sense of social programs which causes instability in society. This seems rather stupid to me. IF the so-called leaders of the US wanted the country to be truly prosperous and healthy, why did they destroy everything necessary for that to happen? My guess? Short term profits over long-term prosperity, greed and ruthless desire for power. The saddest part of the whole thing is that many many Americans buy into the whole philosophy that allows the parasite class to drain all the resources, thereby essentially screwing themselves.
I am sometimes shocked at the stupidity of supposedly intelligent people when it comes to things like Universal Healthcare, or subsidized post-secondary education, or realistic benefits for the poor. It's madness! Why would any intelligent person not want these things as part of their society? Yet, the sprit of greed and selfishness seems to rule all in the US. The "I've got mine, you get your own" attitude disgusts me. When talking about Universal Healthcare, I often hear "Why should I have to pay for someone else's health problem?"... Which of course misses the point completely. If you want a healthy society, society as a whole needs to help each other.
Anyways... /end rant.
It is madness. I have thought on it, and I think it's lead poisoning.
We stupidly allowed lead to be used as a gasoline additive for decades, and generations of children inhaled lead vapor or were exposed to lead in the environment.
The result was higher crime rates, as lead poisoning damages the developing brain.
And now we have generations of people that will follow any blowhard on the radio without questioning, and without any impulse to think for themselves.
Europe was always more dependent on Diesel and public transportation. Which perhaps explains why they don't have Republicans.
There's hope. We killed the leaded gas except for airplanes. The current generation should be less susceptible. And I note that many of them are just not interested in politics at all.
Moonbeam---
Since you don't want to be "an apologist for Steve Jobs," permit me to perform that service, esp. given your last sentence, which leaves open the question, "taking [WHOM] to task for their failure to fix the problems in their overseas factories..."? I am really angry about the recent spate of Apple-bashing, esp. as it has about it the stench of orchestration. For example, National Pubic [sic] Radio started Apple bashing a couple of weeks ago, along nearly identical lines as the Walden Bello and NYTimes articles. The Times article is another classic case of their long-criticized use of "anonymous sources," as though given the huge numbers of sources they claim for the two-part series, they couldn't find someone who would speak on the record---as with their "journalism" in the run-up to Cheney's invasion of Iraq. The Apple bashing has about it the stench of human gang mentality portrayed in "Lord of the Flies," and suggests Nietzsche's suspicions about the fear and hate directed by the little people against the Ubermenschen. It reminds me very much of the Toyota bashing a couple of years ago, that went on all over the media for weeks! Allegedly, the accelerator pedal in the Prius tended to get stuck in the accelerating position---based initially on an hysterical cell-phone call from a middle-aged man who later died in his car crash. Suddenly defective Toyotas appeared out of the MSM ether like mushrooms after a summer rain. I had just bought a Prius! It is impossible for the pedal to get caught in the driver's floor mat, unless someone has unhooked the mat. And after months of study, both Toyota and federal agencies agreed that the computer system was NOT flawed, i.e., no inherent design or production flaws here. Then it turned out that the onboard computer in the dead man's Prius showed that unlike his hysterical report, he had NOT hit the break pedal as reported. The MSM reaction to the results of actual INVESTIGATION? The equivalent of a NYTimes Correction Box an inch deep on page 9: We apologize about Judy's reporting on Saddam's aluminum tubes! All of this is, as I allege, "orchestrated" appeals to American chauvinism. A perfect example of this chauvinism is Obama's references to GM in his SOTU speech last week. GM is now the "largest" producer of vehicles in the world (Toyota HAD been). Mission accomplished!!! Yippie! Never mind that GM's sales growth is mostly in Asia and that so is their manufacturing growth! Never mind that the U.S. Treasury holds about a third of GM stock! and was bailing out the dinosaur precisely at the time the anti-Prius hysteria hit, and never mind that that the vaunted Chevy Volt(e) is little more than a "concept car"! Shortly after Obama's speech, NPR did a long interview with the top GM guy. I cannot recall when I last heard such limp-dick questions about such important issues. Apple is not responsible for the highly efficient manufacturing system in southern China. China is! Bello is using Apple as a "hook" to approach a far larger social issue than the fact that Apple has been perhaps the most innovative creator of consumer-based products since Art Deco or the introduction of the electric engine starter motor. Apple didn't invent the cell phone, but Steve Jobs radically repurposed it. Apple didn't invent the Graphical User Interface (GUI) (probably Xerox's PARC did), but the iPod takes the concept to revolutionary levels. Historically, Apple is the only small computer products company to survive the Leviathanic attempt by Microsoft to become an effective monopoly. Microsoft remains far bigger than Apple and employs essentially the same supply-chain and outsourcing model that just about every Transnational uses. Why attack the little guy who learned how to use flint to make finer points than the bigger competition? Bello stepped aboard the Apple bashing train and he ought to get off at the next station---or sooner! One more point concerning the earlier reference to Open Source code... With the introduction of OS X several years ago, Apple abandoned its own earlier operating system for desk-top computers and reverted to a UNIX-based system and made most of its OS X code transparent and invited third parties to write their own apps. (At the time I hated that decision because it made nearly all my training in troubleshooting the earlier Mac OS obsolete, but I see why they chose that route.) Today's iPod is even more Open Source, which is why independent code-warriors have written around half a million apps for it! Apple nearly committed suicide in the mid-90s (hats off to "Corporate Personhood" via "Citizens United," Chief Justice Roberts!) Which brings me to my final point. If you think "Citizens United" is bad for the electoral process in this country, imagine the implications if these kinds of misdirected orchestrated MSM "echo-chamber" tactics start becoming a standard in the corporate world, with huge agglomerations of money (the Koch Brothers come to mind, as does Wal*Mart) selectively and chauvinistically directed at their few surviving competitors! As it is, the MSM are now essentially owned as an integrated part of the largest corporations in America. If "the truth is out there," you won't find it reported in the MSM. They are too busy learning the etiquette for the proper eating of snails. Aim your wrath at a more appropriate target, like mountaintop removal in Appalachia for dirty coal extraction, or fracking in the shale beds of NE Ohio, Pennsylvania, and elsewhere. To put that into perspective, consider the information/energy formula here. Apple has revolutionized CITIZEN access to data (information). The iPod most likely delivers the most information for the least amount of total energy consumption since the invention of moveable type and the Book! And with the intro of the iPAD, you don't need to drive to the library to read a book. It's on-line and in your grubby little hands while you sip your Starbucks. NO apologies! -30-
Thanks for mentioning UNIX and this is important. Apple and later Microsoft may have borrowed from UNIX but nothing beats the real thing. With more training seminars to get people motivated, there might be a chance to get more people to abandon Windows and MAC in favor of any flavor of UNIX for their systems. Open source and community-oriented, this could be the start of mentally motivating people away from dependence on big bad corporations. Microsoft and MAC are like Republicans and Democrats in many ways.
Philippine ex-left joins attack on Supreme Court:
On January 27, Philippine congressional representative Walden Bello, a member of the pseudo-left party Akbayan, filed a complaint with the office of the Ombudsman against Philippine Supreme Court Spokesperson Midas Marquez. The complaint demanded the repayment of $US200,000 to the World Bank.
Bello established an international reputation in anti-globalization circles for his critique of the World Bank, particularly with the publication of his book Development Debacle: The World Bank in the Philippines in 1982. That he is now filing a court case in the Philippines on behalf of the World Bank is striking to say the least...
...The complaint against Marquez is part of a political witch hunt by President Benigno Aquino against former President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo and her supporters. Arroyo is facing charges of corruption. Her close ally, Supreme Court Chief Justice Renato Corona, has been impeached and his trial is entering its fourth week. At the forefront of this anti-democratic assault are the various parties of the Philippine ‘left.’
..Walden Bello made his reputation on the basis of his critique of the World Bank; he is now using World Bank documents to carry out an anti-democratic assault on the Philippine judiciary on behalf of the interests of a section of the Philippine ruling class. In doing so, he is also backing the interests of US imperialism...
http://wsws.org/articles/2012/feb2012/phil-f03.shtml
The article you posted correctly points out that Walden Bello's party, Akbayan, is allied with the current president of the Philippines, who comes from the obscenely wealthy elite. However, let us get a few things right. The ex-president of the Philippines, Arroyo, committed massive graft and corruption, carried out a counterinsurgency campaign that resulted in the kidnapping of many activists, their tortures and murders, supported the reign of powerful clans, such as the Ampatuans in the southern Philippines who carried out the massacre of 58 people, including 32 journalists. The Chief Justice who is now being impeached is Mrs. Arroyo's midnight appointee (she made him supreme court chief justice a few weeks before departing her office), her insurance that she won't be punished for all her crimes.
Of course, President Aquino wants a supreme court that will be sympathetic to his reign. President Aquino's programs are not different from his predecessor: more privatizations of public bodies, more foreign-operated mining, an assault on the labor rights of Filipinos, more counterinsurgency campaigns that have committed the same abuses by the military.
The spat now happening is just a fight between elite forces in a sham democracy.
What is particularly disturbing for me is that Walden Bello is an ally of the current President Aquino who has pledged to allow more US troops in a program called the Visiting Forces Agreement, wherein Philippine military forces conduct exercises with US troops. This is a clear violation of the Philippine Constitution's ban on foreign military presence. The Philippines is being dragged into that "containment" game the US is now conducting against China. I haven't heard Walden Bello's objection to that.
Jobs will continue to be transferred to Asia. When Korea is reunified it will become a manufacturing powerhouse. Millions more jobs will be transferred there. Can US America save enough money using cheap Asian labor to provide welfare for one hundred and fifty million unemployed workers? What will happen when US American consumption drys up? Will the low paid Asian workers be able to make up for the loss of the insatiable US American consumer? The current political and economic systems in place cannot control or deal with the realities of bringing so much cheap labor into the world economy so quickly. Welcome to the new world order, The Corporate State
I'd like to know how the "400K per employee profit is calculated.
400,000 dollars times 63,000 US and foreign employees (excluding contract employees) is $25.2 trillion. Even Apple didn't make that much.
Wow! A Communist totalitarian dictatorship is the "ideal capitalist state". How fair and balanced.
Good article! Time to allow for David Erdal, Andy Lane, and other Loch Fyne Cysters' advocacy of all employee owned companies. It works and is flourishing, saves companies, and let's see if anybody else can do better.
Didn't Steve Jobs attempt to dismiss all the suicides at Foxconn as merely in line with the general suicide rate of China or some such nonsense?
The callousness of treating human life as expendable is unvbelievable, especially from a man who is treated as god by so many.
The only thing that matters is profit and image. If few know or care about the disgusting underbelly of labor arbitrage, de-facto slave labor, and environmental destruction, all the better for profit and brand image. Do anything if you can get away with it, no matter how terrible.
But according the dominant neoclassical economic theory, morality is external to the market.
The logical conclusion to this is to dismiss working conditions that cause people who are already accustomed to horrible conditons, jump out windows to kill themselves.
What next, make Soylent Green out of them?
There is something cold and hard about the way Apple developed over the years: it should have looked at Google's Just be Evil message.
Oh, sorry, that's DON'T Be Evil...my mistake
The problem with the out-sourcing problem in china is not only because the system of government controls workers, but also because there are more workers skilled in doing fine, detail intensive procedures that americans would find too tedious to endure over an 8 hour work day, 5 days a week, who are motivated to accept terrible work conditions. The number of products just from Apple which are sold world-wide would require a work force of skilled workers that the american system doesn't have. This sounds rather like the issue with immigrant farm workers. Farmers who want to hire u.s. citizens are not able to find laborers able to do the work that is required for the length of time required.
Hogwash. Great example of irrational fairy-tale neo-liberal economic ideology. This post reflects a profound ignorance of political economy.
Now Mr. Greenspan, surely you know better