Here's an interesting take on what's actually holding back economic progress: it's not that manufacturing capacity is oversaturated. The real constraint? Most economies haven't built enough advanced service sectors.



Manufacturing is the traditional ladder—it's how countries bootstrap themselves out of lower income brackets. Every developing economy goes through this phase. But here's where it gets tricky: once you're out of poverty through manufacturing, climbing to high-income status requires a completely different playbook.

High-income nations don't compete on factory output. They compete on knowledge services, financial infrastructure, design, technology, and specialized expertise. The transition from "we make stuff" to "we solve complex problems" is harder than it looks. Some economies nail manufacturing but get stuck there, unable to shift into the service-based value chains that actually generate wealth at scale.

This matters for anyone thinking about long-term economic momentum and where growth actually comes from.
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DegenDreamervip
· 9h ago
Well said, manufacturing is the ladder for poor countries, but they start to get stuck once they reach middle income. Really, many countries get stuck in this transformation... Upgrading the service industry seems easy but is actually extremely difficult; if talent can't be retained, it's game over. That's why some countries are forever stuck in the middle-income trap.
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NoStopLossNutvip
· 9h ago
In simple terms, the bottleneck for most countries is industrial upgrading. Manufacturing is just the foundation; the real money is in the service industry and technology.
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ServantOfSatoshivip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's the hurdle of industrial upgrading; manufacturing is just the stepping stone.
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DegenDreamervip
· 9h ago
ngl that's why some countries are stuck... manufacturing is the ticket in but not the endgame
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DegenWhisperervip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's the old familiar issue of industrial upgrading. Manufacturing is just a stepping stone... The real bottleneck is in the service sector. Some countries are indeed caught in a trap; they become proficient in manufacturing but fail to think about pivoting.
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BearEatsAllvip
· 9h ago
Basically, it's the old story of industrial upgrading, but indeed most countries are stuck here... Making products is easy, selling ideas is the real challenge. Manufacturing is like climbing a ladder; the service industry is where the real gold and silver are, but turning around is extremely difficult. Domestic manufacturing giants are also exploring transformation into knowledge services, but not everyone can handle it. That's why some countries will always be just OEM factories... it's a structural issue.
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AirdropJunkievip
· 9h ago
ngl That's why those manufacturing powerhouses always hit a wall... Just doing OEM work isn't enough.
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