Monday, August 1, 2011
Most of products: Make in China
When you go to buy clothes, a cell phone, or a computer, many of the products label are “Made in China”.
This is the link that shows the video and the article about a man walked in Washington D.C., he went to many of the store and shop to see the products, and it shows most of the products are labels “Made in China”. Many of the products are chapter and have better quality.
China is a developing country with many people. Most of people build the factories in China because the labor and the material are enough to support the factories. Also in China, the labor is very cheap, so it can save money for the factories. China has many of the resource and it is nature, that resource is need by many products. It would help the skin become improvement and the productivity also improves. People could buy good Chinese products within low price. It said: .As we all know China is a developing country with a large population. Most factories are labor-and resource-intensive industries, compared to many other countries the costs of labor force saved a lot. And due to China also a country aboundant in natural resources, almost all the materials needed in production can be supplied home. Most importantly, constant innovation of technology has brought to China tremendous changes. Many hi-tech products are now developed and applied in China, the productivity improved a lot. All these account for the good Chinese products with low price. You may also find many world famous companies have moved their factories to China in order to cut off their expenses, in fact, what they sell to you also MADE IN CHINA."
According to "Beijing re-markets "Made in China" to the world" it said about "The thirty-year 'Open Door' policy launched in 1979 by Deng Xiaoping certainly paid off: China is now the workshop of the world, with a potential workforce of 800 million and vast quantities of cheap raw materials. Its production ranks among the world’s most competitive: clothes, electronic appliances, telecommunications equipment… There’s no escaping the “Made in China” label. The country produces 40% of the world’s cell phones and more than half of all computers on the planet. In 2008, Chinese exports reached 1.43 trillion dollars (1 trillion euros)."
It describe China import products are the large number of the foreign countries.
Posted by yunxin liang at 9:16 PM
sampleporfolio!!!
Tuesday, August 2, 2011
Blog Comments
Blog Comment #1
07/06 - Classwork...
Marco said...
Yunxin, freedom!!! But freedom at what expense? What is John O'Sullivan saying about "certain" people in the United States, and beyond? Does our freedom, that of Americans, trump that of others?
jjMohamed29, good response, but try to stay within the text and not make assumptions (even if they do make sense, i.e., the U.S. "losing its place"). What in the text specifically speaks to this inequality you write about?
Tiny Tait, yes, America's divine right! America is chosen, by a power not of this earth, to lead the earth to greener pastures. I think the argument could be made that this is the belief behind the U.S's foreign policy... What a powerful document, no? Great response grounded in a textual analysis.
amin, yes, John O' Sullivan is speaking to the responsibility of the United States to establish democracy throughout the world. Isn't this what we see today in American foreign policy? What exactly do you mean about following the law? Expand your response!
July 7, 2011 8:13 AM
-----------------
07/06 - Classwork...
Marco said...
Yunxin, freedom!!! But freedom at what expense? What is John O'Sullivan saying about "certain" people in the United States, and beyond? Does our freedom, that of Americans, trump that of others?
jjMohamed29, good response, but try to stay within the text and not make assumptions (even if they do make sense, i.e., the U.S. "losing its place"). What in the text specifically speaks to this inequality you write about?
Tiny Tait, yes, America's divine right! America is chosen, by a power not of this earth, to lead the earth to greener pastures. I think the argument could be made that this is the belief behind the U.S's foreign policy... What a powerful document, no? Great response grounded in a textual analysis.
amin, yes, John O' Sullivan is speaking to the responsibility of the United States to establish democracy throughout the world. Isn't this what we see today in American foreign policy? What exactly do you mean about following the law? Expand your response!
July 7, 2011 8:13 AM
-----------------
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)