I was reading “The Engineering Ethics Blog” and the author called my attention to an article by Andy Grove which had appeared in Bloomberg. It sounded interesting, so I went and had a look.
(I warn you, I ran across this quote from Grove while backgrounding the column: “You have to pretend you’re 100 percent sure. You have to take action; you can’t hesitate or hedge your bets. Anything less will condemn your efforts to failure.” I became a fan of his at that point, so I am in his corner!)
Andy Grove is one of the founders of Intel, the chip maker. He came to the United States from Eastern Europe, a refugee from the communist bloc. In a lengthy and well written article, he talks about the loss of American jobs and what that means in the long term. Unlikely many who point out problems but have no solutions, he provides a set of solutions as well.
Grove is a visionary and he has become increasingly concerned about the status of the United States. Grove reasons that the United States’ current policy is to allow jobs to go overseas because the jobs created here will be high quality knowledge jobs that pay more and provide more influence. Grove points out that creating one of these jobs is immensely expensive compared to regular jobs and while it is nice to create a few high quality jobs, it’s most unsatisfying when the rest of your population is unemployed.
Grove argues that several Asian countries have careful job creating policies at the national level. He feels we can learn a lot from these nations. In addition, he favors a tax on out sourced products particularly electronics like computers. He admits that this may start a trade war but he says if there is such a war we should plan to win.
I like what he says. I believe he is right and that our nation’s future in disappearing in front of our eyes.
I give you the link to his article here.
Here’s Andy Grove discussing the critical importance of moving transportation from oil to electricity.
I will be talking more about this topic later on. I am struggling with a sinus infection. It’s slowing down my posting.
James Pilant
I feel very strongly that Grove is right on target. What good will it do our country to only have a handful of knowledgably employed people, when we have so many people that are not employed? How do these companies plan to keep increasing their profits when people can’t afford to buy their products anymore? The bottom line should be measured in Americans employed not just dollars and cents.
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Thanks for your comment, Samantha. You add to the argument nicely. jp
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