Dozens of impoverished countries make T-shirts and other very basic clothing. But only a few countries — really just China, Bangladesh, Vietnam, Indonesia and to some extent Cambodia and Pakistan — have developed highly complex systems for producing and shipping tens of thousands or even hundreds of thousands of identical, high-quality shirts, blouses or trousers to a global retailer within several weeks of receiving an order.
Europe's Lost Keynesians by Kenneth Rogoff - Project Syndicate - 0 views
China's E-Tail Revolution by Richard Cooper and Richard Dobbs - Project Syndicate - 0 views
Tell Me How This Ends - NYTimes.com - 0 views
After Bangladesh, Seeking New Sources - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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The clothing needs to be labeled correctly so that it travels smoothly through a large retailer’s distribution centers
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The process requires formidable numbers of skilled workers who can oversee quality control as well as labeling and shipping of garments.
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After Bangladesh, Seeking New Sources - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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Bennett Model helped pioneer the exporting of garments from China in 1975, the year before Mao Zedong died,
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Buying from Bangladesh, said Mr. Model, “has been politically incorrect ever since problems started there, so a lot of major players had already been looking for alternatives.”
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Western executives are checking on potential new suppliers in southern Vietnam, central Cambodia and the hinterlands of Java in Indonesia.
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Ceiling Collapse at Shoe Factory in Cambodia Kills 2 - NYTimes.com - 0 views
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“We visually always inspected them, but you need true engineers,” he said.
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Cluster Observatory - 0 views
Europe's Irrelevant Austerity Debate by Daniel Gros - Project Syndicate - 0 views
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But the debate about austerity and the cost of high public-debt levels misses a key point: Public debt owed to foreigners is different from debt owed to residents.
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If foreign debt matters more than public debt, the key variable requiring adjustment is the external deficit, not the fiscal deficit. A country that has a balanced current account does not need any additional foreign capital. That is why risk premiums are continuing to fall in the eurozone, despite high political uncertainty in Italy and continuing large fiscal deficits elsewhere. The peripheral countries’ external deficits are falling rapidly, thus diminishing the need for foreign financing.
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And the evidence confirms that the euro crisis is not really about sovereign debt, but about foreign debt.
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Amnesty for illegal immigrants will cost America - The Washington Post - 0 views
Europe's work is far from over - The Washington Post - 0 views
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Perhaps it should not be surprising that Europe still looks to be in serious trouble. Growth has been dismal; the euro-zone gross domestic product has been below its 2007 level for six years, and little growth is forecast this year.
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