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Showing posts with label manufacturing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label manufacturing. Show all posts

Saturday, April 26, 2025

"Trump tariffs" will bring game manufacturing back to America

It's been awhile since I've been able to enjoy any real gaming and by that I mean board games, miniatures games, what have you.  The most interaction I've had lately with anyone in the competitive sphere has been coinciding with the twentieth anniversary going on right now of the online role-playing Guild Wars... and I rarely get into that "player vs. player".

No, I'm talking about actual games one-on-one in the physical world, where you and your opponent are looking at each other across the table and able to pick out each other's nuances.

But gaming is still something I keep an eye on, if only to stay up to date on what the industry is up to.  And lately that has inordinately crossed over into the realm of true-life politics.  Enough so that it bears bringing up by your friend and humble blogger.

The tariffs that have recently been imposed on products coming into the United States, particularly from China, are eliciting a wide response from the gaming industry.  There have been more than I have been able to readily keep up with, but this very thoughtful statement by Loren Coleman, CEO of Catalyst Game Labs, is typical (it's also one of the best written I've seen coming out of the businesses being affected).  Incidentally, Catalyst Games Lab is the current publisher of BattleTech: a game and fictional universe that I have long admired and respected.

Coleman's treatise however is missing one element that otherwise has been ubiquitous throughout writings from interests in the community: it doesn't emphasize that these are "Trump tariffs".  Most are making it clear in no uncertain terms that the tariffs - and the resulting higher cost of games - are the result of the policies of President Donald Trump.  Coleman's omission of that terminology is something I am glad to take note of.

It is the general consensus of game publishers that the tariffs are making it much more difficult to market their products.  The smaller companies especially are feeling the impact.  And that is regrettable.  It absolutely is.  Not I nor anyone that I personally know want companies in America to be squeezed out of making a profit that in better circumstances would be enjoyed more.

But these are not those "better circumstances".

So let me cut to the chase: I for one as a gamer don't mind the higher costs.  I'm not unsympathetic to the American publishers but I'm also not blind to the reality of the situation.

And that is this: I would rather there be a temporary increase in the price of games, because of the tariffs, if that means we start transiting manufacturing of games back to the United States.  In the long run we are going to likely be thankful that we did that.

For far too long, American companies have looked to China for the production of goods that are ostensibly the results of domestic conception and design.  It's been cheaper, the argument has been.  No doubt that it has.  But it has also incurred a cost in jobs and financially overall.  That is money that could have been better kept infused within our own economy.

For sake of good as least expensive as it could probably be, we have been inflicting enormous harm to our country.  And it's been this way for many long decades.

The tariffs that President Trump has imposed - and which we should hope that Congress enshrines in legislative action should it come to that, though it can also be argued that Congress long ago already passed along the power of tariffs to the executive - are admittedly going to make a lot of items on this country's store shelves more expensive for the foreseeable future.  That is no doubt going to be an effect that trickles down to smaller businesses.  But I don't know if that's going to be avoidable.  This is the cost of having production being in China and other foreign countries all this time.  That should not have happened.  American companies, including game publishers, should have kept the manufacture of their products here to begin with.

In the grander scheme of things, the higher prices we will pay because of tariffs are our own fault.  We wanted cheap goods, we got them... but there was always going to be a price to pay in the end.

I love playing games, be it Go or Settlers of Catan or X-Wing Miniatures.  But I love our country even more.  And I would rather there be a temporary higher costs of games and other products, that would precede bringing their manufacture back to the U.S.  Because among other things doing so will bring about more permanent cheaper prices for us in the long run.

American game publishers should have kept manufacturing here to begin with.  But they didn't.  And now we are going to have to make up for letting China make the actual physical product all this time.

But I can't emphasize it enough: this won't last forever.  This is going to incentivize bringing the products of our own ingenuity back to where they rightfully belong.  This is temporary.  Nobody apart from our foreign competitors wants there to be higher prices forever.  That won't do anyone on our side any good.  Americans like stuff and they're willing to be reasonable in how much they pay for it.  It's going to hurt for awhile to have some good things, but in the long run we are going to be thankful that we did.  It will be more jobs in this country, a stronger economy, and yes even lower prices at the friendly local game store among other retail outlets.

The pain is momentary.  But the benefits are forever.  If we want to keep them, anyway.

Be of good cheer.  And hang on for awhile.  It may take a year, or three.  But we've done this before.  Some are comparing what Trump and his allies are doing to the Smoot-Hawley Act and are declaring that the tariffs will lead to another Great Depression.  I on the other hand see this more as being in the line of President Reagan's efforts in the early Eighties to bring back American industry.  Those measures worked magnificently, and we were all the better for it.  I'd dare say the entire free world profited from our taking more control of our own destiny.  It worked then and it can and will work now.

It's going to be tough.  But it's going to be worth it.

And when this over, I will be more than happy to engage in a game of BattleTech with this blog's readers.  It's been too long since I've gotten to play House Kurita.  I promise to be honorable.

Saturday, March 14, 2020

Coronavirus: Calling America to the Carpet

Some are almost rubbing their hands in glee at coronavirus: holding to the notion that this is an obvious sign of the Second Coming because Pestilence is loosed upon the land. Though adherent that I aspire to be, my eyes cannot but roll in disbelief. Pandemics are almost as reliable as Old Faithful and will remain so until the end of time. The average span between worldwide outbreaks is around a hundred years. And coronavirus is hot on the centennial of the Spanish Influenza.

No, it is not the time for overzealous fervor to grasp rational thought. But with respect to my fellow Christians, coronavirus is at last the “Come to Jesus” meeting that the United States is long overdue for.

Let’s consider what must certainly be the most serious issue about what coronavirus is now teaching us. We have a woeful, immoral and almost criminal over-reliance on China for our manufactured goods, and especially pharmaceuticals. The vast majority of medication consumed by Americans come from Chinese labs. Many of these facilities, incidentally, have been accused of utilizing manufacturing processes that defy safe and sanitary protocol. Even so, the drugs are being shipped into the U.S. and domestic drug companies care little. After all, it’s easier to charge nigh-unconscionable prices for vitally needed medication when it can be manufactured for pennies overseas. Even cheaply-manufactured medications such as acetaminophen and insulin are now supplied by China. Perhaps ninety percent of antibiotics like penicillin are sent to the U.S. from factories under the ultimate control of Beijing.

Profits are good. Profits drive innovation and research. But the drive for profit in defiance of ethical responsibility has inflicted a grievous wound upon the nation’s self-sufficiency and general integrity. It is a wound that politicians – on both sides of the aisle – have not looked past so much as pour harsh acid upon.

And now comes word that China is threatening to deny America access to drugs that could stem the coronavirus outbreak in our country. It is not an empty threat. Particularly not in the present environment of trade hostility that has already awoken the bear market. Right now the ChiComs are feeling pokey about the U.S.’ international response to the coronavirus pandemic. What happens in the event of a full-blown economic war between east and west? Should China choose to do so, it could cut the spigot off for all distribution of medications to the United States.

Pause and consider what this would mean to diabetics dependent upon their neighborhood drug stores being stocked with insulin, or medications commonly prescribed to address influenza: an illness that far more people each year perish from than will on account of coronavirus. People are now going full- blown paranoid about a shortage of toilet paper. But that can be rationed. With medication, not so much. I myself am now weighing the likelihood of medications running out that I use to manage having manic-depression. The number of Americans who have mental health conditions is enormous. Might a dire deficit of mood stabilizers lead to mass ideations of suicide or harm to others?

It is now clear that America has an over-reliance upon Chinese manufacturing of pharmaceuticals for too long. But our lack of autarky is betrayed again by a spectacle beheld by even the healthiest of citizens: the vast shelves of cheaply-produced goods at Walmart stores dotting across the fruited plain. And also readily available from online retailers. For decades American companies have parceled their industrial capacity to Chinese workers who are underpaid and overworked. We have enjoyed cheap clothing and kitchenware and collectible action figures and Blu-ray players. We have also compromised our economic independence. And though the policies set in motion during President Trump’s administration have yielded enormous rebirth of long-shuttered factories, America is still hurting from decades of job losses. Once the textiles industry in America was one of the mightiest of employers. It allowed families to grow and thrive and allowed countless young people to better their lives with college education. Today textile production in the United States has almost completely evaporated, particularly in the Southeast where it was once towered over all other industry.

If China can cut off medication for one key sector, it can cut off every medication. As well as every other product that comes from there to American ports. And what is America going to deny China in turn? Blockbuster action movies whose studio executives kowtow to mainland Chinese “sensibilities”? Clothing and medication are vital assets. Extravaganza entertainment is not.

The coronavirus outbreak, depending on who one chooses to listen to, is either the dread harbinger of the end times or a momentary blip upon medical history. Six to eight months from now we will likely be laughing about the coronavirus “plague” just as we did about Y2K. But the vulnerabilities it has exposed should be – as some activist leaders have coined the term – a teachable moment for America.

It is time to rediscover anew the virtue that American protectionism is a virtue and not a vice. We are obligated to look after the interests of our own people, and that is absolutely not to be taken to mean that we are a selfish or uncharitable nation. American greatness however has from its colonial beginnings meant looking to ourselves for production of food, goods, and medicine. We have been abundantly blessed with these and many more fruits of our labors. And when the fruits have been so bountiful, we have gladly allowed the people of other nations to enjoy much of our surplus. It is conceivable that World War III was staved off because the Soviet Union came to be dependent so greatly upon American grain production. Had domestic farming capacity during the Cold War been at depleted levels, the possibility would exist that Moscow would have been much more desperate and belligerent toward its western rival. The Politburo was wise enough to recognize its own weaknesses. Why then should the United States be any different?

America has been betrayed by politicians and lobbyists acting in the interest of foreign powers if not being outright paid for services rendered. We have been living on borrowed time and now the coronavirus threat has pulled back the curtain on our would-be industrial masters. Were our international situation a private business, the ones responsible would have long been chewed-out by the company honchoes. And most likely given a cardboard box and fifteen minutes to clean out their desks. Their incompetence would not be lauded and certainly not rewarded.

The attitude toward this land by too many entrenched politicians, corporate opportunists, and foreign sympathizers has gone far beyond incompetence and into the territory of treason. Perhaps the coronavirus will cast long-awaited light upon such treacheries. And perhaps the American people will have eyes opened at last to demand an end to over-reliance on international industry.

If so, in the greater scheme of things the coronavirus may prove to be less a blight and more a blessing.