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Thread: CoronaVirus ==> Empty Shelves
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23rd February 2020, 09:07 AM #16SENIOR MEMBER
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It's not as simple as that, Elan. It's about the ratio between the labour input and the value of goods produced.
BTW, I apologise for straying off topic. I don't recall the same degree of disruption during the SARS epidemic. I received a blade guard from Banggood yesterday which took about three weeks to arrive.
mick
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23rd February 2020, 12:35 PM #17.
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23rd February 2020, 07:07 PM #18Senior Member
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SARS looks to be small time compared to this one.
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23rd February 2020, 07:39 PM #19
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24th February 2020, 09:48 AM #20
That's what happens when the supply vs demand effects labour inputs particularly for skilled "middle income earners", wages rise, the standard of living improves, new consumer markets emerge and global corporates look for new "low cost" manufacturing opportunities.
This also occurs in the "services sector" as we have very recently seen with the demise of Holden with an Australian based very skilled workforce of designers, technical specialists, robotics & automotive engineers etc - no longer required. Then there is the ceasing of production in Thailand, the knock on effect to suppliers, and the full flow on effect into the wider community of non-automotive related services sectors, retail, groceries etc.
"Globalized" sourcing & manufacturing is wise IF it does not become "centralized" anywhere along the entire supply chain, including customs, quarantine, shipping into and out of all sectors in the chain.
What will happen IF a similar event to SARS or COVID-19 occurs in a centralized facility with Amazon, Bangood etc???Mobyturns
In An Instant Your Life CanChange Forever
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24th February 2020, 10:39 AM #21SENIOR MEMBER
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We might have to visit the local hardware shop, lol.
Events like the GFC and COVID-19 remind us all of how vulnerable we are in our turbocharged world. In 1859 there was an enormous solar storm (the Carrington Event) which allowed Morse code signals to be sent along unpowered transmission lines. If the same happened today, we'd lose GPS, radio coms, the power network and goodness know what else. Civilisation would come to a standstill, possibly for months or years.
Hopefully COVID-19 won't be catastrophic.
mick
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24th February 2020, 11:43 AM #22SENIOR MEMBER
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Spare a thought for the families of and those who have died and are dying from this terrible virus, rather than complaining about our shelves being potentially empty.
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24th February 2020, 03:57 PM #23
just a minor observation ...
around 30 years ago, I sat through a series of lectures by a labour economist.
The gist of their position was that eventually all labour that could be shifted to a low wage country would be so shifted. Services like hair dressing, household cleaning, electricians, plumbers, etc would retain their pricing power because you can't send to Singapore when you need an electrician or a plumber or your hair cut, but you can relocate to Thailand for your dental and elective surgery.
Ultimately Australia will be left with only highly skilled labour and the unskilled moveable jobs will vanish or be recompensed at below the poverty level.
a very depressing thought.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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24th February 2020, 04:14 PM #24
I can spare a thought -- but, realistically, coronavirus is not a "terrible disease", it's not even a "serious" one.
Influenza kills 12,000 to 60,000 people annually -- from 140,000 to 810,000 annual hospitalisations annually
The CDC's latest bulletin for the US is here Weekly U.S. Influenza Surveillance Report | CDC -- the flu death rate is 6.8%
For comparison, the death rate for the coronavirus is only 4.9% within Wuhan -- and 2.1% across China as a whole.
In May 2003, The World Health Organization (WHO) estimated the overall fatality rate for SARS (severe acute respiratory syndrome) patients at 14% to 15%. The agency estimated the rate for people older than 64 years to be more than 50%
So while not a small number, coronavirus is, to date, killing people at a rate that is only a fraction of the effect of SARS.regards from Alberta, Canada
ian
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24th February 2020, 04:16 PM #25Intermediate Member
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24th February 2020, 04:39 PM #26SENIOR MEMBER
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I understand the problem with Coronavirus is that it's not only highly infectious but like all viruses. it may mutate into something far worse.
Last year my G.P. offered me a pneumonia shot in addition to my flu shot. Sure, why not? I said without thinking. Walking home I started thinking that I might prefer influenza in the form of the old person's friend sometime in the next twenty years. Maybe I should've refused.
mick
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24th February 2020, 05:10 PM #27
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24th February 2020, 07:23 PM #28GOLD MEMBER
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I am currently in Vietnam and went out to dinner last night with my wife
We had 2 beers, 2 wines, entrees, mains and dessert and it cost me $29.57 ...... you can’t even buy the drinks in Australia for that
I am told that wages here are around $150.00 a month.
I cant see how Australia will ever compete unless it is being dug out of the ground or it is brought here to get buried
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24th February 2020, 09:07 PM #29
I received this email this morning regarding a tool I’ve ordered from a Chinese supplier,
I thought the wording was a bit off.
“Dear ,
Thank you very much for your order from Banggood.com.
Due to the adjustment of the Spring Festival holiday, some of our logistics company partners are still in holiday, we are already processing all the orders and will ship it out once they resume to work, your order will expect to be shipped within 2 weeks. Thanks for your patiently waiting. We apologize for any inconvenience caused.”
Cheers Matt.
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24th February 2020, 09:24 PM #30
Simplicity - Happy Holidays indeed!
I know two people near Wuhan. They've been in their units for 4 weeks now. They are going up the wall. They were told this morning "April"....
Next, a guy I talk with infrequently in Shenzhen has 600 people there. Just reopened. Closed Today - sick people again. Four more weeks.
Another dude I chat with is in "shipping" (he seems knowledgeable)... said anything leaving Shenzhen is only 10% full. Containers are piling up like crazy. There is talk of heaving them off the boats into the sea (!!!) or charging people sending crates back to China empty a "handling fee" of $1200.
Treat these as anecdotal and hearsay, for its just talk, but I've no reason to expect these people to BS.
Ian - here is a decent video describing the whole China --> Vietnam manufacturing thing. I've been watching these two dudes for a while.
Overall, you probably all know that I'm a hair-triggered market-collapse doom-enthusiast and I have to admit I've been watching this since the beginning of January with an incredibly increasing rate of alarm.
Ian, yes, the flu is bad, but the numbers we are seeing aren't....true. It is worse. Much worse. Now that its spread out of China - such as to South Korea, we are getting an appreciation of just how bad it is. The numbers from SK and the Diamond Princess are far more reflective of the "reality" Ive been told (by Chinese on Telegram and Reddit)....
I feel... without being alarmist, that this will be Bad.
EDIT: These videos by Dr John Campell are 10000% worth your time to watch.
EDIT 2: This is the shipping info I was pointed to. China's reefer cargo crisis worsens as carriers plan to abandon boxes - The Loadstar
More - and this is the shipping view of 165,000 ships! Look at them piled up at EVERY chinese port! Click on the ships and they are either stationary or just moving in circles for the last week... China's reefer cargo crisis worsens as carriers plan to abandon boxes - The Loadstar
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