To: DMaA who wrote (769916 ) 10/20/2022 12:38:16 AM From: didjuneau 2 RecommendationsRecommended By garrettjax kech
Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793620 I like Elon. He seems to think a lot like me, philosophically. I found this thread on Tesla interesting since I wondered why they were willingly manufacturing in China and not complaining. That's not something I'd want to be doing, but there may be good reasons, like raw material availability. I'm not that interested in Tesla - just the rationale. I ran into these statements on the Tesla board:I have said from the very beginning that Tesla’s 100% ownership of their Chinese facilities will not last. China is most likely looking at this as a cheap technology transfer opportunity. Once China decides that they derived the maximum benefit, they will simply absorb Tesla China and I can’t think of anyone willing or able to argue with them. Message 34028752 The Tesla guys are not super dumb and China nationalizing the plant is the first thing you think of. When asked about it, Elon said "The only thing you can do is keep ahead of the reverse engineering your competitors are doing. They are not going to kill us if there is still important tech that they need to steal." In other words, you are right that as soon as the Chinese have stolen all the technology they will kill Tesla and nationalize the plant. However, if you have a real strong R&D department that day never comes. Suppose you are the Chinese government, You look at Tesla and you have to say "Let's not kill him just yet, because:" 1) We have not copied the die casters technology even though we own the company because of all the metallurgy and fine tuning involved. 2) We don't yet fully understand the upcoming CyberTruck or the semi truck technology. 3) We really don't understand the technology behind the chips Tesla makes. 4) Uh-Oh, they just started the TeslaBot......
siliconinvestor.com It appears that if you are really, really good at competing, you can even get away with free trade in China. They must recognize that they're not ready to compete in certain areas, so they'll watch and learn. The question is, does the U.S.A. want to subsidize this "learning"? Electric vehicles just got another tax break.