W
ith the infl ux of Sinopian
savings pushing down
interest rates, Usonian entrepreneurs descended on
bank loan offi cers with their best business ideas. But as
the jobs of fi shing and producing
became increasingly
outsourced to the Sinopians,
the business plans they
presented were very different from what the bank had
seen in prior generations.
Most business proposals now
favored companies that required local workers to deliver
a service. These jobs could
not be outsourced and were
generally less capital intensive.
In a celebrated oration given at the island’s fi rst
economic
conference, Ben Barnacle explained the
changes. He argued that
the Usonian economy had
developed to the point where the lowly process of fi shing
and production could be
relegated to poorer economies,
leaving Usonians free to pursue more sophisticated
“service sector”
jobs like chefs, storytellers,
tattoo artists,
and the like.
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