Posted on 07/03/2003 9:25:05 PM PDT by edsheppa
Edited on 04/22/2004 11:49:19 PM PDT by Jim Robinson. [history]
What role will U.S. manufacturing play in the national and global economies in the coming years? What jobs will be left for American workers?
It's more than an academic question for many company owners. Stan Donnelly, who owns Donnelly Custom Manufacturing Co. in Minnesota, is studying Mandarin in case he has to move his machines to China. Already, he buys molds from China to make his custom-designed plastic parts. To date, Mr. Donnelly has been able to keep production of those parts in the U.S. But as his customers increasingly demand lower prices, he wonders if he will one day need to move production to Asia as well.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
It sure is. It completely ignores the complex supply chain that's necessary to support the manufacturing infrastructure. High-tech is glitzy and glamorous, but if you erode the foundation of the industrial base, the whole kit and kaboodle will collapse.
Not as a first step. I honestly think that we should first and foremost eliminate all the subsidies to overseas investment and to the hiring of guest workers in the USA. IMHO that may well be enough to make teh turn arround. However, I think tarriffs may prove useful for dealing particularly with those nations that engage in unfair trade practices such as the PRC and India with its capital controls. If, however the USA is still seeing a net outflow of capital then I would agree that a protective tarriff is needed. I would not have any problem whatsoever if the income tax was replaced with revue tarriffs as a means of funding the federal government. Nor would I have any problem with a national sales tax replacing the income tax.
Enterproise zones where corporate income taxes were eliminated and much eased regulatrions were in place would also make sense to me if the companies locating there in agreed to the maximum American content possible for all production therein in return for the eased restrictions. If such areas became the fuel for an economic success then maybe it would lead to these reforms becoming nationwide.
For certain national security industries I wqould prohibit foreign outsourcing for national security reasons. for example missle guidance systems.
From 'The Daily Reckoning' of July 4, 2003.
Now I know why the WSJ's cute little graph does not show 2003 numbers.
Bullsh#t.
FDI in the US takes on an entirely diffferent shape than FDI in other countries.
With China for example the largest investors by far are US corporations who are locating factories etc there.
By far the largest investors in the US are bankers and people pursuing retirements. We have the system for it.
In other words in China our companies buy and build factories. In the US the Euros and whoever else by treasuries or CDs or stocks.
The thing with the investments in China is that China rarely sees the profits from them. They see the investment dollars and job gains, but little else, depending on the nature of the set up. In brief, made in China, sold wherever, and profits sent to New York corp HQ.
100 years ago folks were losing their jobs in agriculture. Today folks are losing their jobs in manufacturing.
100 years ago a lot of people worked in manufacturing and were paid very low wages. Today a lot of people work in the service sector and are paid very low wages.
100 years ago the folks that owned and managed the manufacturing plants made enormous amounts of money. Today the CEO's are paid enormous amounts of money.
Ya gotta ask yourself, "why did the manufacturing wages go up so much, from slave rates to middle class income?"
Unions!
If the only jobs the CEO's will let Americans perform is service industry jobs, then we need to make those jobs middle class jobs. The way to do that is unions.
There's a lot of money in the pipeline. When companies pay rock stars and jocks millions of dollars to endorse their products, when CEO's are making tens of millions per year, when companies are slashing their labor cost by 90% by moving manufacturing overseas, there's a lot of money in the stream between the Chineese guy making $5 a day and your local Wal-Mart.
You would think that with all the money that manufacturers save by outsourcing jobs that prices would go down, right? Wrong! The cost of living has not decreased, not even a fraction of one percent. So where's the money? Rock stars, jocks, and CEO's. Hey, that's your money as they say on TV. You want higher pay? Unionize! That's the way our fathers and grandfathers did it. You think Wal-Mart would go broke if the paid their workers more money? Not hardly. Can they outsource those service jobs to China? Not hardly! Ya, I know Republicans think unions suck. Well, guess what? Poverty sucks.
On July 4th we should remember our veterns. So let's remember the boys who came home from WWII. They went to work in the factories and they joined unions and made a better life and a better country for all of us.
There you go. A true entrepenaur. Do you deliver or do I need a truck to pick up. My garden thanks you.
I still think your assertation that free trade prevents you from buying a $1200 microwave and $600 shoes is laughable.
If you think differently back it up.
That's the funniest thing I've read on FR all day ! Thanks for the laugh. I'm happy most americans know the Leninist view when they read it.
Many experts believe that the pattern of past years will continue -- that low-skilled jobs making lower-value, mass-produced items will keep migrating to countries where labor is plentiful and cheap, while manufacturing in industrial nations, such as the U.S., Japan and Western Europe, will center on complex, value-added products and systems
The author of this article knows nothing about the production of plastic parts. In this example, the complex value added product is the mold which was made in China. Mold making is a labor intensive complex, tightly toleranced machining job.
On the other hand, once the mold is installed in a plastics injection molding machine the actual plastic part production operation consists of one operator babysitting several automated injection molding machines while the machines spit out finished parts. Load the injection molder hopper with plastic pellets, hit the start button, and walk away.
THe labor content on plastic parts is low so by conventional wisdom such operations would be the last to be shipped to low wage countries. However, moldmaking is a detailed and complex task the likes of which the author said would stay here.
Manufacturing is dead.
Want fries with that?
Regards
J.R.
THe chart is meaningless. It displays the absolute number of people employed in manufacturing. What has the population done in that time? What percent are employed in manufacturing? Here is a clue, it has steadily declined for 30 years.
For centuries, productivity increases have been freeing up employees to take better higher paying jobs, and it lowers costs, too,
That is what the economics textbooks tell us. Unfortunately, empirical data proves the theory wrong.
Read "The Pooring of America - the Myth of Free Trade" by Dr Ravi Batra. He uses US Bureau of Labor and the Economic Report of the President government stats to demonstrate that these assumptions failed ca 1973 and explains why.
It is because of free trade.
Regards
J.R.
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