I guess I just have trust issues. I believe little of what I see and less of what I read when it comes down to marketing of products. The rules regarding country of origin on products are very loose and vary from country to country. For example in Canada if you buy a container load of widgets from China at 25 cents a unit and package/market them in Canada at a cost of 35 cents a widget you are able to label the widgets as being "Product of Canada". You may even produce video of your Canadian based widget factory which might produce a few widgets for public relations purposes. Am I being paranoid? Of course I am. After the strawberry incident, they all turned against me, you'd be paranoid too The point is, if its important to consumers that a product be from Canada or Germany and they are willing to pay a premium for such a product then its important to the manufacturer to make the product in Canada or Germany, however, if the manufacturer is able to make the product in China at a fraction of the price and still legally label the product as having been produced in Canada or Germany and price it accordingly, then economics requires that they do so. Lets put 60 Minutes' investigative team on this.
Furthermore, the differences mentioned by those who've seen both razors side by side may very well be considered to be improvements by Ming Shi and not done for reasons of cost cutting.
Furthermore, the differences mentioned by those who've seen both razors side by side may very well be considered to be improvements by Ming Shi and not done for reasons of cost cutting.