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The Manufacturing Factor: A History of America's Economic Ascension
www.economyincrisis ^ | Sunday, March 19, 2006 | na

Posted on 03/19/2006 5:54:24 AM PST by B4Ranch

The Manufacturing Factor: A History of America's Economic Ascension

Pat Choate writes in March 2005 how America came to be an economic superpower and how we have gone to great lengths to un-do what was created.

By suppressing American colonial manufacturing, Britain attempts to suppress American independence

The American revolutionaries almost lost the War of Independence because they did not have the manufacturing capacity to produce the arms they required. In the 17th and 18th centuries, Great Britain had prohibited its American colonists from manufacturing virtually any type of good for either their own use or export.

When the war began in 1776, a desperate Continental Congress sent Benjamin Franklin, the most famous American of his time, to Paris, where he was authorized to buy muskets, gunpowder, sails, cannon and shot. He also ordered blankets, pants, shoes and shirts for the Army Ð items the colonists could not manufacture in great quantities.

Once Franklin had the goods, he had to get them across the Atlantic, past the British Navy's blockade, and into the Caribbean Islands. Once there, smugglers put the goods onto lighter ships and slipped them up the coastal rivers to George Washington's agents. To get a musket and gunpowder from France to the U.S. took almost six months.

The deprivations caused by a lack of war supplies seared into the minds of the American revolutionaries the need for a strong domestic manufacturing base. Never again, swore George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, Henry Knox and a generation of other leaders, would the U.S. be dependent on others for the necessities required for its national defense.

Creating a strong industrial base was top priority for newly independent United States

When George Washington became President in 1789, his top priority was to create a strong U.S. industrial base. Early on, he commissioned Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton to devise a set of policies that could help the nation industrialize. The result was Hamilton's now famous, Report of Manufactures, issued in December 1791.

Hamilton proposed that the United States establish incentives to encourage foreign investors, mechanics and inventors to come, live and work in the United States. He also envisioned that the U.S. would never be able to compete against European and other foreign manufacturers unless its infant industries had the protection provided by a wall of tariffs.

By a striking coincidence of history, Adam Smith published his book, The Wealth of Nations, in 1776, the same year the American colonies declared their independence. Smith's book electrified intellectual thought in Europe and in the United States. Leading political figures, such as Thomas Jefferson, became strong advocates of free trade.

After the Revolutionary War, Jefferson and others argued that the United States should immediately adopt a free trade policy. Ironically, the British killed the idea by refusing to enter a treaty of commerce with the new nation and by banning U.S. trade in the West Indies. Simultaneously, British manufacturers began to dump their inventories of goods in the U.S. market at prices below their cost of production, their goal being to suffocate America's infant industries.

Nonetheless, the free trade advocates continued to urge open markets. The final blow to their hopes came after the war of 1812, a conflict in which Great Britain tried to reassert its control of its lost colonies. When the war ended, the British were as wooden headed as they had been before. Again, they tried to suffocate America's infant industries by dumping goods on the U.S. market, even as they imposed high tariffs and quotas on American imports into Great Britain.

Even Jefferson became convinced that free trade was a bad idea for the United States. In 1816, Senators Daniel Webster, John C. Calhoun and Henry Clay enacted America's first protective tariffs, creating the ÒAmerican SystemÓ of trade. It was Hamilton's plan.

America responds to British attempts to cripple American industry through cheap imports

Under the American System, the United States forfeited the quick consumer benefits from cheap imports. Instead, the nation took a longer view. It promoted domestic investment over personal consumption. Simultaneously, America allowed the import of foreign products for those willing and able to pay the tariff, ensuring consumer choice.

Robert G. Ingersoll, a prominent 19th century politician and orator, captured the thinking of that era as follows:

"It is better for Americans to purchase from Americans, even if the things purchased cost more. If we purchase a ton of steel rails from England for twenty dollars, then we have the rails and England the money. But, if we buy a ton of steel rails from an American for twenty-five dollars, then America has both the rails and the money."

The American System was U.S. trade policy from 1816 until 1933, the midst of the Great Depression. During that 117-year period, America had transformed itself from a handful of sparsely populated colonies on the East Coast, where 95 percent of the people lived on the farm, into the world's richest, most powerful, most technologically advanced industrial nation.

The Great Depression was not caused by American tariffs

The Great Depression marks the break point between trade eras in America. The old era ended in October 1929 when the New York Stock market experienced a financial panic. On Monday October 28, 1929, the market lost 13 percent of its value; the next day, Black Tuesday, it lost another 12 percent. The market did not hit the bottom until July 1932 with the Dow at 41 points. In that 32-month decline, the Stock Market lost almost 90 percent of its value. The market did not recover for another 22 years.

The panic was the first in the history of the U.S. Federal Reserve System, which Congress had created in 1913. When the panic came, the Fed first hesitated and then it did exactly the wrong thing Ð it tightened the money supply when it should have flooded the markets with liquidity. Over the next three years, the FED cut the money supply by almost 30 percent, turning a classic panic into the Great Depression.

Ironically, the two people who got the blame for the Depression were two Western politicians, not the Fed. They were Senator Reed Smoot (R-Utah) and Representative Willis Hawley (R-Oregon). Almost eight months into Wall Street's prolonged meltdown, they shepherded through Congress the now infamous Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930 that raised tariffs on about one-third of U.S. imports, which made less than 2 percent of the Gross National Product. Nonetheless, economists and politicians still blame a law created in June 1930 for creating a Depression that began in October 1929.

In 1933, Congress, fearing a backlash because of the public's false perception that the Smoot-Hawley tariffs had caused the Depression, delegated their Constitutional authority to regulate trade to the State Department and Secretary of State Cordell Hull, a former Member of both the House and Senate. Hull was a devoted free trader, but in his negotiations with other nations, he insisted on reciprocal tariff reductions.

Trade moves from a highly valued hallmark of US economic health to a giveaway concession in foreign policy negotiations

Reciprocal tariff reductions were the hallmark of U.S. trade policy until the late 1960s, when the United States negotiated the Kennedy Round of global trade negotiations. In those talks, the United States began to reduce tariffs in exchange for foreign policy and other concessions, such as military bases, and alliances in Cold War.

Trade concessions became a favored foreign policy tool. In quick succession, the Japanese negotiated policy concessions that allowed its electronics cartel to destroy the U.S. electronics industry. In the 1970s and 1980s, the U.S. destroyed its textile and apparel industries by granting other nations special quotas in exchange for their global political support. In the 1991 Iraqi war, the U.S. gave Turkey apparel quotas worth 20,000 U.S. jobs per year. In 2002, Turkey asked for even more concessions, plus $30 billion worth of aid to allow U.S. troops to cross its border and enter Iraqi from the North. Hundreds of similar examples exist.

With the end of the Cold War in 1989, billions of workers in countries that had previously been off limits to European, U.S. and Japanese companies were suddenly anxious to have foreign investment. To guarantee the safety of foreign investment in places such as Eastern Europe, China, even in Mexico, the U.S. led the world in the creation of the World Trade Organization (WTO).

The WTO witnesses willing American subordination of its sovereignty for the first time ever

The WTO sets the global rules on investment and trade. It provides a legal forum where nations can take complaints about the trade practices of other nations. It also imposes a global set of protections for intellectual properties.

The U.S. participation in the WTO is historic. For the first time in U.S. history, the Congress agreed to subordinate its powers to set U.S. trade policy to an international body. It agreed that were there a conflict between U.S. trade laws and WTO rules, the U.S. would change its laws to follow WTO rules or pay damages set by the WTO.

Under the WTO rules, it is illegal for the United States to give any priority whatsoever to American-owned companies that wish to operate in the U.S. The Buy-America laws have effectively been repealed by an international treaty.

The new WTO global regime of trade encourages corporations to shift their production, and increasingly their research and development, from the industrialized world with its high wages, benefits, and worker protections to developing nations filled with penny-wage labor and lax government regulations. Then, the WTO rules also allow those companies to bring their products back into the rich world markets duty free.

Free trade and WTO has devastated the American industry so prized by our founding fathers

The open market policies advanced by the WTO and supported by a bipartisan majority in both Houses of the U.S. Congress have led to a rapid dismantling of the American economy. Since the mid-1990s, the U.S. has accumulated a trade deficit of more than $5 trillion, the largest unilateral transfer of wealth in history. Put into context, as recently as 1970, the United States manufactured here almost 95 percent of all that it consumed. Today, it produces less than half that portion.

At the same moment, the U.S. is shifting its manufacturing base abroad; it is also outsourcing its service jobs. Forrest Research estimates that American employers can profitably ship four out of ten U.S. jobs overseas electronically.

Today, America's trade and budget deficits are so large they exceed the capacity, and willingness, of U.S. and foreign investors to provide the financing required. Consequently, most of the capital that now finances the U.S. trade and federal budget deficits comes from the central banks of four Asian Governments Ð Japan, China, Taiwan and South Korea. They are also four of our major economic competitors.

Present U.S. trade policies are unsustainable. Unfortunately, our President and a majority in Congress do not understand the dangers created by the loss of the American manufacturing base nor do they realize how their policies are leading us to a financial calamity equal to the one that produced the Great Depression.

What is vital is that Americans understand that their country cannot be a superpower without its own manufacturing base. Nor can we maintain our standard of living or retain an assured national defense.

However, costly and however painful, this nation must eventually locate here the industries that produce most of the goods we need and consume, including those required for our defense. In sum, we must replace the ideology of free trade with the pragmatism of nation building. Our Founding Fathers would have understood.

Source: www.economyincrisis.org


TOPICS: Business/Economy
KEYWORDS: chinatrade; crisis; economy; freetrade; manufacturing
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1 posted on 03/19/2006 5:54:26 AM PST by B4Ranch
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To: B4Ranch

I've posted this response before and now post it again:

What is being missed in all of this is the fact that we have lost our industrial base and are now dependent on foreign manufacturers and business for a huge majority of all materials we use in our daily life.

What's worse, our DEFENSE SYSTEM utilizes military parts and equipment purchased "sole source" from many foreign points.

Now the point: When WWII started, due to our huge and powerful manufacturing base, we were able to IMMEDIATELY shift our private manufacturing facilities into manufacturers of military equipment and machinery. Our military power and strength arose from our industrial base. That's how we won the war.

Now, for all practical purposes, we don't have a strong industrial manufacturing base. Crucial parts used in almost everything military come from other countries, foreign designers or inventors. Some of these, who in the future, may become our enemy and actually attack us. Some may be put out of business by the takeover of their own industries by invasion, or political change, and cease sales and support of those products and services we did not originate from our own shores.

THEN, when and how are we to mobilize our industry as in WWII? The answer is simple...WE CAN'T! We don't have it any more!


2 posted on 03/19/2006 6:12:28 AM PST by DH (The government writes no bill that does not line the pockets of special interests.)
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To: DH
I don't suppose there is any room for facts here. Anyone who begins with the premise that things should stay the way they were in 1800 is not my kind of historian. We still have a huge manufacturing sector and are the largest exporter in the world. We are the richest society on the planet by a factor of two, and authors like this want more.

Our prosperity was developed by having huge internal market which the constitution protected from internal tarrifs. It does not have to be manufacturing. If you want to be even richer, foreign trade (similarily stripped of artificial barriers) is the growth opportunity, but it will only flourish if other people have some money. Mercantilist trade policies which insisted on positive balances resulted in 80% of the wealth concentrated in the West.

The rest of the world wants some prosperity. Your choice is to have them as trading partners or see them move in next door to you.

3 posted on 03/19/2006 6:41:25 AM PST by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: DH

I've read your post before. Agreed with it then and agree with it now.


4 posted on 03/19/2006 7:00:36 AM PST by B4Ranch (The truth is good for you, like sunlight, but too much all at once can really hurt.)
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To: ClaireSolt; B4Ranch
I don't suppose there is any room for facts here.

How about these facts?

  1. In 1975, we saw our last trade surplus.
  2. Our trade deficit was $725 billion in 2005.
  3. American acquires 19% of the world's exports.
  4. in 2004, Japan and China, which still currently hold between $1 and $2 trillion US, started to sell their American dollars and are no longer buying our bonds.
The advantages that we had mid-20th century are being depleted.

Clearly we are coasting on the gains made during WWII and before. Any economic security we had gained with our manufacturing and technological competitiveness are being bargained away. We used to employ people here to make things that we or the rest of the world consumed. That was at our zenith. Now we may be feeling fine as we stroll into Walmart, but the good feelings won't last.

Debt, foreign-dependence, manufacturing impotence, and inability to provide secure jobs to technology and other skilled workers are all consequences of these changes. Yet there are many libertarians and other shills for big business (now largely foreign-owned) that continue to line up on FR and tout our decline.

Big, foreign-owned business, has a direct line to our political engines, and they're consuming the wealth and advantages earned with the blood of our veterans during the last 240 years and longer. Superficially things look fine to those who are wealthy and successful, but the rest of America knows better.

I would find it amusing that so many on FR continue to advocate "free" trade (at the cost of our seed corn) and "open immigration," except our once-proud country is being sold down the river. It's a travesty.

And meanwhile, we're replacing our strong and united North American culture with millions of Latin Americans, Africans, Asians, and Mid-easterners every year.

Of course those same libertarian FReepers are ready to line up and defend the obliteration of our American culture, as well. They seem to think that the new "mall culture" where everyone can stroll down a facade and buy in English or Spanish is a sure sign of immigration's successful assimilation.

At present rates of replacement, it is traditional America that will be assimilated into chaos, not the other way around. Either way, it's all for sale to the highest, and often foreign bidder.

So enjoy it while it lasts!

5 posted on 03/19/2006 1:28:57 PM PST by John Filson
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To: John Filson

It is always changing. If you keep waching your rear view mirror, you are sure to have a wreck.


6 posted on 03/19/2006 4:08:23 PM PST by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: ClaireSolt; B4Ranch; A. Pole
I'm not oversimplifying. There would be certain tell-tale signs of America rising to meet the demands placed on us by the internationalists at our helm today. For example, and at minimum, there would be redoubled interest in the sciences and engineering among our young people. There would be a stable birthrate in families native-born Americans. And there would be increased literacy and an energized workforce. Instead we see signs that the workforce is tiring of its need to compete with slave labor sources. We see smaller and smaller families, as we are edged out by immigrants from disparate and incompatible cultures. And we see dismal interest in science and engineering among our youth, who know jobs in those areas are as insecure as can be.

The wreck is definitely happening right now. It's not in the rear-view mirror. The questions is: what are we going to do about it. I saw we should vote our politicians who refuse to recognize America's steady march to third-world status in the name of human rights and internationalism.
7 posted on 03/19/2006 6:20:37 PM PST by John Filson
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To: Willie Green; Wolfie; ex-snook; Jhoffa_; FITZ; arete; FreedomPoster; Red Jones; Pyro7480; ...
Trade concessions became a favored foreign policy tool.

The path of least resistance.

8 posted on 03/19/2006 8:48:23 PM PST by A. Pole (Carly Fiorina: "Technology will 'disappear' in 25 years")
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To: B4Ranch; DH

*BUMP*!


9 posted on 03/19/2006 9:34:51 PM PST by ex-Texan (Matthew 7:1 through 6)
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To: ClaireSolt
The only thing in the rear view mirror is the road well traveled; ahead lies nothing but a vast crevice. We have driven beyond the road and off a cliff, and the same old song playing on the radio doesn't seem as pleasant as it once did.
10 posted on 03/19/2006 9:42:38 PM PST by ARCADIA (Abuse of power comes as no surprise)
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To: ClaireSolt
and are the largest exporter in the world.

Yes. We export wheat and soybeans. They'll come in very hand if we have to respond to an attack and we need to build a lot of missile guidance systems very quickly. Oh pardon me? You say we need rare earth magnets to do that? Oh I am SURE China will make everyone work overtime and freight them to us on COSCO container ships so we can fight them when they attack Taiwan or any other allies we might have. Oh, yes, I am sure Dubai will expedite them so they are unloaded quickly from the ship too. You know they have to protect the $6.9 billion dollars they've invested in our real property, don't you?
11 posted on 03/19/2006 10:07:11 PM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: A. Pole; B4Ranch

a few interesting statistics:

The U.S. borrows more than $2 billion per day from foreigners to finance its huge trade deficits.

Foreigners already own half of the U.S. government's publicly traded debt. Currently $2.19 trillion in Treasury securities were in the hands of central banks, including China and Japan, and private investors abroad.

Total foreign direct investment in this country actual factories, office buildings and other tangible assets as opposed to stocks and bonds came to $1.53 trillion, 8.2 percent more than in 2003.

European nations accounted for $977 billion, or two-thirds, of the $1.53 trillion of foreign direct investment

Arab countries in the Middle East accounted for $9.3 billion, led by $4.7 billion in investment from Saudi Arabia. The United Arab Emirates was second among Middle East Arab countries with $1.8 billion in investments, according to the data.

Nearly one in five U.S. oil refineries is owned by foreign companies. Foreign companies also have a sizable presence in running power plants, chemical factories and water treatment facilities in the United States.


12 posted on 03/19/2006 10:41:09 PM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: B4Ranch

Bump


13 posted on 03/19/2006 11:18:49 PM PST by jpsb
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To: B4Ranch

Treason bump!


14 posted on 03/20/2006 1:41:47 AM PST by Havoc (Evolutionists and Democrats: "We aren't getting our message out" (coincidence?))
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To: hedgetrimmer

This is not correct. "to finance its huge trade deficits." While it is said that money earned in trade is invested in treasuries, the trade deficit is not the same as the federal debt. Foreign investment is a testament to how desirable our business climate is and is a bemnefit to America. It allows us to leverage our money.


15 posted on 03/20/2006 4:38:31 AM PST by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: hedgetrimmer

There are 300,000 manufacturing companies in the US, dumkopf. But, I'll bet you do not and never have owned one of them.


16 posted on 03/20/2006 4:40:22 AM PST by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: John Filson

That has always been the view through shit colored glasses. Some have always bemoaned the half-life of science and engineering as some people are rendered irrelevant by rapid progress when they fail to keep up. My son, the software programmer, consequently, has little sympathy for his uncle the system consultant who does mainframe data bases which is declining. The fact is that they are both working now and making very good money. That is the problem with those who try to policize the lifes of others that they know nothing about. Watching soap operas and bemoaning the fates of imaginary people is about as useful.


17 posted on 03/20/2006 4:49:40 AM PST by ClaireSolt (.)
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To: ClaireSolt
I'll bet you do not and never have owned one of them.

How much?
18 posted on 03/20/2006 6:47:48 AM PST by hedgetrimmer ("I'm a millionaire thanks to the WTO and "free trade" system--Hu Jintao top 10 worst dictators)
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To: DH; John Filson
What is being missed in all of this is the fact that we have lost our industrial base and are now dependent on foreign manufacturers and business for a huge majority of all materials we use in our daily life.

Correct. It's shameful that we only made $3 trillion worth of stuff last year.


19 posted on 03/20/2006 8:42:05 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

I give up! I cannot believe that this graph answers all!

What types of products? What was the cost of doing business in 1990 vs 2006? Just what does this gross amount mean? Are the businesses surveyed and represented in this graph industries that manufacture durable goods, foods, clothing, steel, aluminum, etc...

The big question is: Are these companies manufacturing or assembling? Are their products made from raw materials or simply parts from other countries shipped into this country so that a "made in America" or "assembled in America" tag can be attached to the completed unit?

Simply showing a graph with a gross figure is nothing more than manipulated numbers to make something look good or bad.

I've been in the manufacturing business since 1979 and always get a chuckle when I talk to a salesman. In every case they always throw out GROSS sales figures and have almost no understanding what GROSS PROFIT is. Worse yet, they have absolutely no conception of what NET PROFIT is!

Did this graph take in consideration that in 1990 the cost of doing business was substantially lower than it is today? Did it also take in consideration that gross sales are increased to maintain gross profit due to increased costs of operation?


20 posted on 03/20/2006 9:07:24 AM PST by DH (The government writes no bill that does not line the pockets of special interests.)
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