Posted on 12/04/2007 8:33:30 AM PST by bs9021
U.S. Manufacturing Obituaries Premature
by: Heyecan Veziroglu, December 03, 2007
Instead of mischaracterizing the significance and meaning of the U.S. trade deficit and assuming that the loss of 3 million manufacturing jobs four years ago requires a tough response today, policymakers should try to attain a better understanding of the condition of U.S. manufacturing, Cato Institute policy analyst Daniel Ikenson pointed out in a Capitol Hill briefing that the think tank held recently.
While the U.S.-China trade deficit for goods and services combined has been growing at approximately 23% per annum, the United States remains the worlds most prolific manufacturer, producing two and half times more output than those vaunted Chinese factories in 2006, Ikenson noted. He has analyzed the data and emphasized that U.S. producers still churn out 2.5 times the product coming from Chinese factories although Chinas share of world manufacturing output more than doubled between 2000 and 2005.
The U.S. is the worlds largest manufacturer, said Frank Vargo, VP from the National Association of Manufacturers. Weve emerged from the worst recession decades and production is now at record levels.
(Excerpt) Read more at campusreportonline.net ...
Great post. This article is so counterintuitive to what many people believe. It seems that the MSM has attempted to persuade us that we do nothing but sell burgers and pizza to each other while the billions of people in China produce everything we own and consume.
But but but but but but but but... we can’t be making anything! All the union jobs are gone!!! They must just be assembling parts made overseas!!!! [/idiotpessimisticunionspporter]
I wonder how consumption was measured. Boeing makes some expensive planes here, but they don’t make many of them. Toys from China are cheap, and there are millions of them.
The U.S. is the worlds largest manufacturer
bump
Full Paper referenced above
Thriving in a Global Economy
The Truth about U.S. Manufacturing and Trade
http://www.freetrade.org/files/pubs/pas/tpa-035.pdf
Consider the following facts. In 2006, amid record imports of manufactured products:
Real U.S. manufacturing output reached an all-time high.
Real manufacturing revenues reached an all-time high.
Real manufacturing operating profits reached an all-time high.
After-tax profit rates for manufacturing corporations reached an all-time high.
Return on equity for manufacturing corporations reached an all-time high.
The value of U.S. manufacturing exports reached an all-time high.
U.S. factories remained the worlds most prolific, accounting for over a fifth of world manufacturing value added.
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