Posted on 12/18/2011 7:03:49 PM PST by neverdem
For a generation American manufacturing has been widely seen as a declining sport. Yet its demise has been largely overplayed. Despite the many jobs this sector has lost in the past generation, manufacturing remains remarkably resilient, with a global market share similar to that of the 1970s.
More recently, the U.S. industrial base has been on a powerful upswing, with employment climbing steadily since 2009. Boosted by productivity gains and higher costs in competitors, including China, U.S. manufacturing exports have grown at their fastest rate since the late 1980s. In 2011 American manufacturing continued to expand, while Germany, Japan and Brazil all weakened in this vital sector.
To determine the best cities for manufacturing my colleague Mark Schill at Praxis Strategy Group measured the 51 largest regions in the country in terms of how they expanded their heavy metal sector think automobiles, farm and energy equipment, aircraft, metal work and machine shops. We averaged absolute growth rate and momentum in 148 heavy metal manufacturing industries over ten-, five-, two-, and one-year time frames.
Our top ranked area, Houston, is one of only four regions that enjoyed net job growth in manufacturing in the past 10 years. This year its heavy manufacturing sector expanded by almost 5%. Houstons industrial growth is no fluke; over the past year its overall job growth has been about the best among all the nations major metros.
Houstons industrial success owes much to the citys massive port and booming energy sector, says Bill Gilmer, senior economist at the Federal Reserve office of Dallas. Houston is about energy its about fabricated metals and machinery, he says. Its oil service supply and petrochemicals. Its all paced by a high price of oil and new technology that makes it more accessible.
This shift towards domestic energy augurs...
(Excerpt) Read more at newgeography.com ...
Wanted: Blue-Collar Workers - Who will power Americas new industrial revolution?
bump
When manufacturing unions get weak, manufacturing surges. Who would have guessed?
Thanks for posting this article - excellent. I’ve been sending it to political and local leaders - the opportunity is there if we only get our act together and have leadership that helps instead of blocks progress.
Might have something to do with Governor Perry bringing jobs to Texas
Metals are good.
:)
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