I have stressed many times that productive capacity is the wealth of a nation. Korea shouldn't ship its manufacturing jobs overseas no matter what. This is why Korean chaebols are being criticized. Deindustrialization in the U.S. is by design.
From Zero Hedge:
In the aftermath of several recent events such as i) the issuance of new mega
batch of $12 billion in bonds by a suddenly
domestic-cash strapped Apple, ii) the repatriation of $9 billion
in offshore profits (and payment of $3 billion in taxes) by eBay, iii) the
flurry of pharma M&A deals and reverse mergers in which US companies are
redomiciled offshore (in low corporate tax hosts like Ireland) to avoid paying
US taxes, and iv) the outright use of offshore funds to buy offshore companies
such as the GE-Alstom deal which bypasses the US treasury entirely, two
questions emerge: who has the most offshore cash, and who is most likely to be
the next US corporation to engage in one or all of the above listed transactions
which merely seek to optimize a company's offshore cash holdings.
The answer is shown on the chart below: this is the list of the top 15 US
companies that have the bulk of accumulated offshore
profits, amounting to roughly $1 trillion in cash, which is never subjet to US
taxation, and which financial engineers try to generate the highest shareholder
returns on.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-05-03/these-are-15-us-companies-which-have-most-offshore-profits
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