Originally Posted by Rusty Traque:
Originally Posted by trainman60:
Originally Posted by Rusty Traque:
Originally Posted by trainman60:
Great pieces were made by Lionel and other manufacturers years ago and I will but them ...
One thing... Buying previously made stuff by Lionel and others when they made trains here does nothing to improve the current manufacturing environment in the USA. The profits made on those items have been absorbed years ago and the factories that made them are long gone.
Rusty
Yes b.ut it would help the person selling those older trains. Keep money in HIS pocket
As would buying a new train from him...
Now, let's say I find a 1950's 736 of my dreams at my LHS:
Made in USA? Yes.
Warm fuzzy from buying it? Yes.
Helps the LHS owner? Yes.
Helps the local tax district? Maybe, depends.
Helps the old Lionel Corporation's bottom line? No.
Helps any surviving employees of the old Lionel Corporation? No.
Helps any surviving suppliers of the old Lionel Corproation? No.
Helps the manufacturing tax base of New Jersey? No.
Helps the Lionel LLC bottom line? No.
Helps any current Lionel LLC employees or contactors, both foreign and domestic? No.
Helps any current Lionel LLC suppliers? No. (Remember, the folks at Lionel LLC have to get their office supplies from somewhere, pay rent and utility bills for the offices.)
Helps the state of New York tax base? No.
Rusty
Increases demand for US Made Trains? Yes.
Is the supply of US Made Trains relatively fixed? Yes.
Will the supply adjust (eventually) to meet market demands? Yes.
Will the supply adjustment require new jobs in the US? Yes.
If enough people buy trains, and if enough only buy US made trains, someone will start making trains in the US. Lots of big "ifs".... but there's still a little bit of logic in buying only US made products if you want to support US manufacturing (or, in this case, support the idea of bringing manufacturing back to the US).
There are plenty of examples where a "Buy American" market demand has kept (some) manufacturing in the US: Cars, Guitars, American Flags, etc. Yes, you can find lots of "made in China" examples of all of these, but there's a (still) substantial portion of the market that's willing to pay a premium to have a "made in the US" version....
In the case of toy trains, in reality I think most of us realize it's probably a lost cause... but the "likely outcome" shouldn't dissuade people from taking action in line with their personal principles.