VERSIONS: روسيا اليوم NOTICIAS FREEVIDEO ИНОТВ RTД
breakingnews
Go to main page   USA   News   Struggling US town looks to China for help  
MORE ON THE STORY
15.12.2010, 01:32 9 comments

Many Americas are unemployed and uncounted

The numbers, by any stretch, are staggering. The US Bureau of Labor Statistics announced a 9.8 percent unemployment rate for the month of November, up from 9.6 percent the month before.

06.11.2010, 00:36 3 comments

US economy as good as it will get, for now

US unemployment is at its highest in 25 years and the housing market continues to show signs of weakness

AFP Photo / Robyn Beck 02.12.2010, 01:47 8 comments

Americans: Out of work and dried up

Two million out-of-work Americans are set to lose their unemployment benefits this month after Congress failed to agree on an extension.

30.11.2010, 03:09 3 comments

Stimulus failure may bring austerity to America

An economic indicator of just how bad things have gotten. They are known as ninety-niners, jobless Americans, no longer receiving unemployment benefits.

Struggling US town looks to China for help

Published: 21 December, 2010, 22:58

(16.5Mb) embed video

TAGS: Children, Crisis, Politics, USA, Employment, Economy


Millinocket, Maine was once the symbol of a successful mill town, but due to international competition the once booming town slowly started to spiral downwards. The mill went bankrupt and much of the town's population moved away.

"International trade is what basically took the paper industry in the United States down. It's not just here in the town of Millinocket, it's worldwide…The Chinese, they're more clever than we are and when we do a deal with them, we get the sour end of it," said Douglas Rush, a former mill worker.

Today the town has many abandoned store fronts and 60 percent of the high school students in town qualify for a free lunch because their parents’ income is at or below the poverty level. The high school superintendent decided that in order to save his struggling town, he would recruit Chinese students into the schools, and charge them $27,000 to attend high school for a year.

"They have some skills that we don't have that we'd love to instill in some of our students: this desire to learn and getting ahead by getting a good education," said Dr. Kenneth Smith, the school superintendent.

It's a controversial idea, especially in a town where most view China as the reason their mill went bankrupt. But Smith argued that the competition that might have hurt the town's past, can also help to reshape its future.

"We can't possibly compete with their labor market and they've got 1.4 billion people…I think the competition is good for us and we have to learn and adjust. That's the way the economy works," said Dr. Smith.

But not everyone in this almost exclusively white town is excited about the idea that their school might eventually have just as many Chinese students, as students from Maine.

"Some people will have an issue with it. They're going to be like 'oh my gosh, they're not from here, make them go away'," one student said.

Most of the students at the high school have never traveled abroad. They say what they know about China, they've seen on TV.

"I think the Chinese are going to be in total shock. I think of them as like ten times more advanced than us like more money, a better society and then you look at us and we're poor and have nothing," another student said.

Those struggling to survive in town are angry that the country they blame for bringing down the mill is now the same one they're looking to for help.

"They should have kept people working here…all the jobs have been shipping overseas," said Jimmy Martin, a former mill worker who spent almost four decades at Millinocket's mill and saw it crumble before his eyes.

Dr. Smith argued Millinocket has no choice but to join the globalized economy, and the Chinese may just be their way to get there.

"We need to learn the things from them that they do well and they can learn from us the things we do well," he said.

Meanwhile, Meredith Whitney, the US research analyst accredited with predicting the global credit crunch, warmed that the $2 trillion US debt crisis could bring down 100 American cities and is now the biggest problem facing the US economy.

Hundreds of cities across the country in similar circumstances as Millinocket face the possibility of defaulting on their municipal bonds, bonds which pay for public services. If the cities default, those services may fold as well due to a sever lack of municipal tax income.

Conservative talk show host Tony Katz said he does not doubt the possibility, explaining that cities have continued to overspend and it is now catching up with them.

This is what happens when you spend more than what you have,” he said. “The cities have to get themselves under control.”

China cannot save American towns, he argued. America is a better nation than China and does not need to rely on the Chinese.

City populations’ change and workloads change. The people must adapt, this is the reality Katz argued.

Cities need to cut back possible on the number of police, fire, and social services. The can cut the salaries for elected city officials, the solutions will be different for each city, he explained. But the answer is not to increases taxes, the answer is to spend less.

Excess taxation leads to less revenue for governments,” he said. “Lower taxes allow for people to keep more of their money, spend more of their money and push more of their money into the economy. It’s better for everybody.”


embed video

0 (0 votes)
 
Back to top
next MORE NEWS
21.12.2010, 22:49

Washington DC – A tale of two cities

Washington, where lobbyist fat cats keep getting fatter, working to get laws passed to fill their own pockets, while homeless shelters and kitchens are busier than ever.

21.12.2010, 23:02

New START set for Senate ratification

After countless hearings and endorsements by former US Secretaries of State and top military officials, the New START Treaty is finally headed for a ratification vote in the Senate.

Arthur Borges September 09, 2011, 08:54
0

Del wrote in #3

Sorry Mr. Mayor, but the Chinese wouldn't be interested in your high school idea. Their grade schools are so much more advanced.

 

I do commend Bianca though. You have hit on a hell of an idea.  Declaring those companies as foreign would do a lot to solving foreign ownership and saving or creating jobs here.  Companies like Nike who manufacture sneakers in Thailand for $9 and sell them here to us for $100, but claim to be American.  LIARS.

Actually, wealthier Chinese parents would be interested in sending their teenage children off for a year of studies in a _small_ town in Canada or the USA. As thrifty as they are, they are prepared to invest heavily in their children's education. They would be looking more at the opportunity the children would have to improve their English language fluency, to understand the Western mindset and to extend their social network beyond China's borders.


Also know that government at all levels in China feel the quality of education here is insufficient from grade school on up into most universities.


On Nike and other multinationals, US or from elsewhere, they all use the same tax dodge: you make a shirt for $2.00 in a cheap country, sell it for $2.20 to your subsidiary in a tax haven likeVanuatu, which resells it to your operation in the E.U. or U.S. for $48.00, which sells it to you for $49.95. The result is near-zero profit in the cheap country and in your country, so neither pay tax but a profit of $46.00 in the tax haven which charges a profit tax of 1%, or 46 cents. This is called "tax planning".



Del April 20, 2011, 08:11
0

Sorry Mr. Mayor, but the Chinese wouldn't be interested in your high school idea. Their grade schools are so much more advanced.

 

I do commend Bianca though. You have hit on a hell of an idea.  Declaring those companies as foreign would do a lot to solving foreign ownership and saving or creating jobs here.  Companies like Nike who manufacture sneakers in Thailand for $9 and sell them here to us for $100, but claim to be American.  LIARS.

Stan January 17, 2011, 03:01
0

I applaud the superintendent for his forward thinking and leadership skills. But the attitude and preconception of many of these people have towards the Chinese would be the deterrent in fostering a meaningful relationship between the two very different cultures.
I actually don't see how this town could possibly attract parents willing to fork over $28000 per child to go to school in a backwards dying town. I'm almost 100% sure the education in that town is inferior to the education the those Chinese students receive back home. If it were me, I would be paying a little extra and send them to schools in bigger cities where there is more competition and higher academic standards.