Honky Tonx
New member
I suppose the government could do something like this in relation to the Chinese steel industry
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQ8HjDRrHt0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AQ8HjDRrHt0
In a few years, when we have no steel industry, the Chinese are going to say "that steel we were charging you $50 a tonne for in 2016, we now want $150 a tonne because we know you can't make your own".
And we'll have to bend over and take it.
Not propping it up is dogmatic lunacy.
You make an essential point though about profitability - is that the only measure of the importance of an industry or service?
Would it not be better for the UK to insist that British made steel is used on major build projects like HS2 . This i guess clashes with EU competition laws , but hey ho !
Why should the tax payers of this country buy a loss making or non profitable industry?
It would be better to spend the money to ease the transition of the workers into new industries.
Such as?
Britain doesnt do industry anymore.
I'm a sheet metal worker. The problem with Tata is that they make crap steel. A lot of our suppliers now source from China because Tata had some quality issues with their coils.
I was folding a job only a month ago and the material kept splitting, it's not supposed to. Was traced back to Tata plant at Port Talbot.
If you make sub standard steel, buyers will notice and buy from elsewhere. We try and actively avoid Tata where possible.
Would it not be better for the UK to insist that British made steel is used on major build projects like HS2 . This i guess clashes with EU competition laws , but hey ho !
If cheap Chinese steel is to blame, pay British steel workers the same as their Chinese counterparts and reduce the cost of British steel
Not after June 24th.
Huge chunks of the UK rail industry and the UK electricity industry are state owned. It's just that the state that owns these chunks of UK industry isn't the UK.
Hhhmm, not being part of the EU doesn't appear to have much of an effect on China's ability to trade worldwide...
Interestingly though, does the EU have greater clout to negotiate their steel price collectively? If we are on our own relying on China's steel prices, could we be held to ransom if we are such a small consumer compared to the other markets?
Interestingly though, does the EU have greater clout to negotiate their steel price collectively? If we are on our own relying on China's steel prices, could we be held to ransom if we are such a small consumer compared to the other markets?