HEGEL - Is it really made in Norway ?



Not unlike Ayon, where it is just printed "Austria" and not "Made in Austria" (the usual and official terminology), are HEGEL products actually made and assembled in Norway or just "designed" in Norway and assembled somewhere in China?

I have tried getting a clear-cut answer from dealers with no success. Juste like for Ayon gear by the way.

Thanks if you can help.
soniqmike
09-15-15: Schubert

There is dog eat dog for the poor ,crony for the rich and Social Democracy versions of capitalism .

Both are capitalism like Fiat and Bentley are both autos .
Folks in former are generally less educated in former than later.
Schubert (Threads | Answers | This Thread)

Schubert,

Very well said.
Forget China--it's an eco-disaster full of slave labor. You worry about job loss in America--then buy American audio. Get a pair of Audio Research tube amps--they are heirloom quality. Get a pair of Magnepans, the best speaker bargain in audio is made right here in America--no American company operating out of China can beat THAT. Sure, I have many products in my house made in Asia, but there are some great product lines made right here. Oh, I guess my tubes come from Russia....
If you really want to see the best alternative to the present economic system read G.K. Chesterton works on how
the ancient and true economic smallest unit is the family not the individual.
http://www.businessinsider.com/chinas-financial-building-project-collapsed-2015-7
It may be worth considering that, even if one is a rich audiophile, long-term personal and societal interests might be better served by attending a more modest school instead of say,Harvard, and the money saved on tuition could be better spent on purchasing audio equipment that meets a rigorous "home-grown" standard of acceptability. Rather than acquire electronics of questionable origin, the safe, and yes, patriotic route would be to purchase gear which is unquestionably made in the U.S.A.

As I consider the points raised in this thread, I can't help but think of the work of the French sociologist, Emile Durkheim.

Much of Durkheim's work was concerned with how societies could maintain their integrity and coherence in modernity; this in an era in which traditional social and religious ties are no longer assumed, and in which new social institutions have come into being. One can only wonder what Durkheim might have thought of goods made in China and sold elsewhere without obvious reference to the country of origin.