| > techniques for optimizing for quality and cost Some of those techniques: 1. hiring each other and bloating bureaucracy in healthcare and education and other industries jacking up prices that werent expensive before 2. come up with ideas like 'shrinkflation' and 'planned obsolescence 3. reducing quality and making products unrepairable so we have massive waste in landfills and things like a giant pacific garbage patch 4. purchasing quality brands , parasiting the brand name, and making the actual product shitty 5. hollowing out every industry in quality and jobs...making private equity monopolies so theres no competition and then hiring more MBAs. What you call 'optimizing quality and cost' I call 'trying the fuck the consumer to the maximum amount without them noticing'. But, to be fair, those are the same thing. Just my observations. Capitalism is becoming a zombie and MBAs are the cordyceps. |
What the issue is, is that we’re essentially in the third ‘wave’ of US economic change post WW2 manufacturing boom.
Post WW2, the United States was the only manufacturing economy that hadn’t been bombed to smithereens, has not only little to no real debt, but a lot of debtors that would repay them, and had massive amounts of undeveloped land ripe for development, and a major new manufacturing base looking for things to do.
This allowed the US to become the world’s reserve currency (along with gold) in the Bretton Woods agreement in ‘44. That lasted until ‘71.
[https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bretton_Woods_system] when the dollar stopped being backed by gold, allowing periods of increased inflation.
At around the same time, the economies of Western Europe and Asia had mostly recovered, and they were starting to catch up on manufacturing to compete with the US.
This led to increasing competitive pressures with US manufacturing, and increasing incentives to go towards Globalization and outsourcing to chase the cheap labor and more willing to compete manufacturers in these locations. Switching the US to a ‘knowledge economy’ was the natural progression.
That easy money is mostly gone now, and the US is also no longer far ahead in many areas on knowledge.
China in particular is starting to come close on almost all metrics. If Europe has a recession, their primary disadvantage (cost) may turn into an advantage.
So then the US is much more on par with everyone else - for the first time in several generations.
And that causes quite a rude awakening economically, as now the US potentially has real and actual competitors it isn’t 5 steps ahead of already.
MBA’ism is because long ago the economy switched from ‘actually leaps and bounds ahead of competitors’ to optimization. As most of the actual structural differences have now equalized, and we’re down to who can make it cheaper/simpler. No one wants a 5 lb drill that costs $100 if they can have a 2lb drill that costs $50 and does the jobs they want well.