It might help to inform those who chant the "We don't want metric" mantra
that quality industrial jobs in the 21-st century only go to businesses that
are metric.  The Chinese and Indian workers who are taking American jobs are
more then happy to make the metric products Americans refuse to.

Also, every product the US imports is metric.  That means that the very
people who claim to hate metric have no problem buying metric products made
by other nations.

As long as the US remains non-metric job reports like the one below are
going to be the norm and not the exception.  OK!  I know metric is not the
reason American jobs are being exported.  But the average anti-metric
American doesn't need to know that.  If they can be convinced that job
exports are tied to American anti-metric sentiments, we might win some
converts.

Euric

US jobs created look poor in both quality and quantity
2004-03-11 17:15

Job creation figures in the US may have struck many economists as dismal
over the past few months. But even as job quantity dominates the political
agenda, the quality of the few jobs being created has also caused concern.

Of 290 000 private-sector jobs created since April 2003, most - 215 000 -
have been temporary positions, according to last week's employment figures.
Private-sector employment would have fallen last month without the creation
of 32 000 temporary jobs in the professional and business services sector.

About 4 300 000 Americans are also forced to accept part-time positions
because they have failed to find full-time work - 1 000 000 higher than the
January 2000 number.

The recent data show that US companies remain reluctant to commit themselves
to hiring new permanent staff. Economists note wryly that US companies are
happy to flirt but remain unwilling to walk to the altar.

"It is slightly depressing to think that even the poor job-creation figures
we have had have been flattered by temporary positions," says Drew Matus, US
economist at Lehman Brothers. "A lot of what we have been getting is
lower-quality jobs."

The prevalence of such stop-gap job hiring casts doubt on President George
W. Bush's ability to benefit from an economic feel-good factor ahead of
November's presidential election. It also helps explain why wage growth is
only just managing to keep pace with inflation, at about 2 per cent.

Companies are becoming more aware of the attractions of temporary staff,
says John Challenger, chief executive of Challenger, Gray and Christmas, an
agency that helps find new jobs for dismissed workers.

"Not long ago companies were quite willing to have workers 'on the bench',
so that they were available in case demand picked up," he says. "Having
overdone the hiring at the end of the 1990s, there is a greater appreciation
of the need to keep workforce levels 'just in time'."

Technology has made it easier for companies to recruit quickly when they
urgently need to expand output, he says. "Companies are trying to think of
staff more like inventory, keeping things to a minimum."

The appeal of temporary staff also stems from the soaring cost of the
benefits enjoyed by permanent workers. In 2003 the cost of these benefits
rose 6.3 % - most than twice the 2.9 % rise in cost of wage growth.

Benefits now cost about a third of total cost of remuneration. This can
often be enough to offset the disadvantages to temporary workers, who
initially lack company-specific knowledge and are usually paid higher wages
to offset their lack of work security.

"This surge in benefits costs has certainly worked against hiring permanent
workers, since companies just do not want to lock in these benefits at the
moment," said Richard Berner, chief US economist at Morgan Stanley.

Some economists even suspect that Mr Bush's tax incentives for business
investment, which allow for 50 per cent depreciation in the first year on
most business equipment, may have temporarily helped tilt the balance in
favour of spending on equipment instead of new permanent workers. This
incentive is due to expire at the end of this year but may have contributed
to the 15.1 per cent growth rate of business investment in the final quarter
of 2003.

"On the margin this may help explain why companies have been keener on
investment than permanent hires," said Nigel Gault, director of US research
at Global Insight, the economic consultancy. But the most important benefit
of temporary workers is that they can easily be dismissed if business
conditions turn sour.
"There remains a sense of caution among executives," says Jan Hatzius, US
economist at Goldman Sachs. "They feel things are better but have seen
enough false dawns that they are not yet totally convinced that things will
stay better."

Most economists continue to believe that as confidence in the recovery
builds, and the opportunities to enhance efficiency become more scarce,
companies will once again start to increase their permanent staffing levels.
The lingering fear, however, is that the weak labour market itself could
start to undermine the economic recovery, unless hiring picks up soon.

Last month Alan Greenspan, the Federal Reserve chairman, told a
congressional panel that US businesses continue to work off the "stock of
inefficiencies that had accumulated in the boom years".

Christopher Swann, FT, 2004-03-09

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Hu, Alfred" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "U.S. Metric Association" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, 2004-03-11 10:26
Subject: [USMA:29174] RE: Metric experience with FedEx shipping today


Gavin,
Good job in being pro-active in promoting metric awareness.  I've done the
same thing years earlier here in progressive and liberal San Francisco, CA,
but I guess I got a worse response.  I asked why the postal service does not
use grams and that most of the world uses metric and the clerk told me that
not every country uses metric.  She then summoned the next customer in line
as quickly as she can.

Metric can only be enforced via the federal government who is a wimp when it
comes to SI.

alfred

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