• LeGrognardOfLove@lemmygrad.ml
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    1 month ago

    It is.

    Pharmaceutical, chemical industries, some high tech material … They also count assembly of parts in semi-automated factory for final product as manufacturing.

    I’m not sure it’s cheating. It’s just that manufacturing means more than just steel and base products…

    You can still have good manufacturing output but not be producing base products. It just means that you have a different import/export profile.

    Just look at the us imports/exports, you’ll see what I mean…

    • burlemarx@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 month ago

      Yes, not only that, I guess the number which represents output is just dollars. If they are producing a bigger proportion of luxury goods and less of regular goods, their output could be decreasing at the same time the revenue increases.

      Regarding jobs, they could be importing goods from labor-intensive production processes and then assembling the parts and selling at a higher price, so this is why we don’t see the number of jobs increasing at the same time output increases.

      In summary there is a lot of information that is simply hidden because the only variable they are analyzing is money.

      • LeGrognardOfLove@lemmygrad.ml
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        1 month ago

        That’s true.

        In Canada, a lot of the “value” produced is just Canadian selling the same houses to each others at inflated prices, at breakneck pace.

        It’s housing hypertrading, it’s Kafkaesque…