cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/6745228

TLDR: Apple wants to keep china happy, Stewart was going after china in some way, Apple said don’t, Stewart walked, the show is dead.

Not surprising at all, but sad and shitty and definitely reduces my loyalty to the platform. Hosting Stewart seemed like a real power play from Apple, where conflict like this was inevitable, but they were basically saying, yes we know, but we believe in things and, as a big company with deep pockets that can therefore take risks, to prove it we’re hosting this show.

Changing their minds like this is worse than ever hosting the show in the first place as it shows they probably don’t know what they’re doing or believe in at all, like any big company, and just going for what seems cool, and undermining the very idea of a company like Apple running a streaming platform. I wonder if the Morning Show/Wars people are paying close attention.

  • OsrsNeedsF2P@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    The Yuan is currently trading at 7.32 to 1 USD

    That means nothing without knowing the total supply

      • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        For that you need 2 data pieces:

        • The median pay of chinese workers in Yuan.
        • The Yuan - Us Dollar cross currency exchange rate.

        You then use the second to convert the first into US Dollars so that you compare the Chinese salaries in USD to American salaries is USD.

        Merely the second piece of data wIthout the first means nothing if you’re trying to compare salaries.

        For example, before the Euro the Italian Lira used to have a cross currency exchange rate with the dollar which was thousands of lire per dollar and that didn’t mean Italians in the 80s were incredibly poor: because for every dollar the average US worker received in their salary the average Italian worker got thousands of lire, all put together mean they got about 1/2 to 1/3 of a US salary rather that the 1/1000 that by your the exchange rate alone suffices “logic”.

        By the way, that cross currency exchange rates are meaningless to compare incomes or costs without the actual incomes and prices in the local currency, is really, really, REALLY basic financial knowledge.

        • SCB@lemmy.world
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          1 year ago

          You then use the second to convert the first into US Dollars so that you compare the Chinese salaries in USD to American salaries is USD

          You don’t need to do this because you only need to look at the fact that those jobs are competed for to see that they are desirable.

          Wage parity isn’t a meaningful discussion when discussing comparative advantage. Too many other factors come into play.

          • Bernie_Sandals@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Okay but you realize that any job would be competitive in situations of poverty right? That’s why you need the second data point.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              That’s specifically why comparative advantage is a good thing - lifting people out of poverty is a good thing.

          • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            To fully measure Comparitive Advantages, you must include the differences in manpower costs, which brings us back to salaries (plus, since this is to compare manpower costs, you also need things like the employer-side tax costs such as social security payments), which then needs to be converted to a single currency using cross-currency exchange rates.

            Further, every single monetary elements of calculating Comparitive Advantage which is in local currencies needs to go through those cross-currency exchange rates in order to be comparable.

            There is no way you can calculate comparative advantage merelly with the single datapoint which is a cross-currency exchange rate because all that tells you is the relation between two units of measurement and says nothing about the actual quantities being measured.

            As I said, this is incredibly basic financial stuff.

            To give you a really basic non-financial example which hopefully will make you understand it:

            • Two farms produce milk, one in Britain and the other in The Netherlands. The farm in Britain measures milk by the pint. The one in The Netherlands measures milk by the liter.

            What you wrote in your original post is equivalent to saying that “The farm in Britain produces more milk because 1 pint = 1.759754 liters”.

            You don’t know anything about how many pints the British farm produces, or about how many liters the Dutch farm produces, yet you claimed the ratio between two measurement units is enough by let you draw conclusions about production numbers even though you used no prodution numbers.

            If I was to bet I would say you’ve read some articles about how the exchange rate of the Yuan vs USD is kept artificially low to increase the competiviness of Chinese exports, didn’t quite understand how it works and still thought you knew enough and applied it were it wasn’t applicable and/or in the wrong way.

            • SCB@lemmy.world
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              1 year ago

              No I just work in international business and know hy we outsource certain roles.

              You keep pretending you know more about this, and you’re describing irrelevant things. I took econ/IB in college too, bud. Lots of people do.

              • Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Since we’re pulling rank, I worked in Finance, specifically the Investment Banking and the Funds industries, some of which being very well know names (Fidelity, Deutsche Bank, even Lehman Brothers back when they still existed), always in the EMEA divisions which, unlike our US colleagues, deal with cross-currency trades all day every day (because EMEA actually means Europe Middle-East and Asia, so it’s a lot more than just trades on USD priced assets, for USD books, settled in USD).

                So I’m quite familiar with exactly what cross-currency exchange rates mean, and it’s painfully obvious that you have absolutelly no clue what you’re talking about when you’re quoting a cross-currency exchange rate by itself and claiming that alone is proof of comparitive advantage.