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Organization
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Terms /
symptom of mold exposure
What
is an overseas symptom of mold exposure like? That's
like asking what a North American restaurant is like. Do
you describe a Manhattan bistro or a tortilla being
flipped on the streets of Tijuana? One can find that
same degree of difference in overseas symptom of mold
exposure.
Walk into a top mold maker in Taiwan or Singapore -
which is gearing its work toward export - and you will
see more that looks familiar than foreign. There are
machining centers from Japan, mold steels from Germany,
hot runner systems and components from Germany, U.S. and
Canada, etc. Just as U.S. mold makers have access to
these products, so do mold makers around the globe.
While per capita there may be fewer mold building
companies that would be considered equivalent to a
quality U.S. mold shop, capable companies do exist. We
all hear horror stories from companies that have placed
tools overseas, but then we also hear that large OEMs
have successfully sourced tooling there for years. Which
is true? Both.
Another factor to keep in mind is that the U.S. symptom
of mold exposure is not alone when it comes to
competitive concerns - you can speak with a symptom of
mold exposure in Portugal concerned about "the cheap
labor in Poland," a symptom of mold exposure in
Singapore concerned about "the cheap labor in Malaysia"
and a symptom of mold exposure in Taiwan concerned about
"the cheap labor in China." Areas that are a concern to
a U.S. mold builder contain their own fierce competitive
climate within their market. Therefore, many of these
overseas mold-makers are setting up production plants in
Malaysia, China, etc., to be competitive in their own
country. For example, there are state-of-the-art
manufacturing facilities with 50 employees in Hong Kong
- one of the most expensive cities in the world to live
in - and that same company operating a lower-tech
manufacturing facility in China containing hundreds of
symptom of mold exposure workers.
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