Posted on 08/23/2003 8:04:48 AM PDT by cp124
STUDY SHOWS MANUFACTURING IS KEY TO INNOVATION,PRODUCTIVITY, STRONG GROWTH AND GOOD JOBS
Manufacturing Erosion Poses Threat to Standard of Living
WASHINGTON, D.C., June 10, 2003 While manufacturing has been the engine for healthy economic growth and good jobs, intense global competition and the rising cost of doing business in the U.S. threaten manufacturings capacity to maintain the nations economic strength and standard of living, according to a new study by economist Joel Popkin.
Manufacturing spawns more additional economic activity and related jobs than does any other economic sector, stated Popkin, president of Joel Popkin and Company. The study, Securing Americas Future: The Case for a Strong Manufacturing Base, commissioned by the Council of Manufacturing Associations (CMA), contends that manufacturing is the heart of an innovative process that powers the U.S. economy to global leadership and that Americas unprecedented wealth and world economic leadership are made possible by a critical mass of manufacturing within the geographic confines of the American common market.
Popkin shows how the unique linkages of manufacturing to the rest of the economy create more innovation, productivity and good jobs than any other sector of the economy, said Jerry Jasinowski, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. Popkin attributes Americas high standard of living to the manufacturing innovation process. Research and development stimulates investment in capital equipment and in workers, leads to new processes and products, generates spillovers that benefit other economic sectors, and ultimately leads to higher living standards.
Manufacturing has an amazing impact on our economy, Jasinowski said. Every dollar of specific manufacturing production creates an additional $0.67 in other manufactured products and $0.76 in products and services from non-manufacturing sectors. Manufacturing contributes more than 60 percent of U.S. investment in research and technology, and manufacturing workers make 20 percent more than the average wage.
However, Americas industrial leadership is being squeezed between unprecedented foreign competition based upon predatory trade practices that make it impossible to raise prices, and rising costs due to rising health care costs, soaring runaway litigation, and excessive regulation. The result is a dramatic decline in manufacturing cash flow that forces firms to cut back on R&D and capital investment, and to reduce employment. The U.S. manufacturing base is receding and with it the all-important innovation process that is the seedbed of our industrial strength and competitive edge.
The loss of 2.3 million manufacturing jobs poses a real and present threat to the American middle class, said Thomas Dammrich, president of the National Marine Manufacturers Association, and chairman of the CMA. These are among the best paying jobs in our country, and almost all of them offer a full range of benefits, including health insurance. Every lost manufacturing job is a tragedy for someones family.
The greatest long-term impact of the erosion of U.S. manufacturing, according to the Popkin study, is on innovation. U.S. manufacturing generates the greatest innovation process in the world by germinating and nurturing innovations from concepts through to full-fledged improvements in the products and processes that provide the basis for improved productivity, prosperity and a higher quality of life, the study concludes. But as U.S. manufacturers face serious challenges to their continuing existence, the critical mass necessary to maintain a dynamic innovation process is jeopardized.
If we want to maintain the R&D investment and innovation strength of the U.S. economy, we must require out competitors to compete on a level playing field, hold down the costs of doing business at home, and encourage R&D and investment, said Jasinowski. It is increasingly important that policy makers hike spending on R&D activities, that we enact a permanent R&D tax credit, and that the government provide incentives to increase the supply of scientists and engineers. The U.S. is facing a critical skills shortage in the near future as the current generation of manufacturing workers retires and few young people are coming into industry.
If the U.S. manufacturing base continues to shrink at the present rate and the critical mass is lost, the Popkin study concluded, the manufacturing innovation process will shift to other global centers. If this happens, a decline in U.S. living standards in the future is virtually assured.
The CMA is an independently funded division of the National Association of Manufacturers with more than 200 manufacturing trade association members. The Popkin paper can be accessed at the NAM web site at www.nam.org/future.
The National Association of Manufacturers is the nations largest industrial trade association. The NAM represents 14,000 members (including 10,000 small and mid-sized companies) and 350 member associations serving manufacturers and employees in every industrial sector and all 50 states. Headquartered in Washington, D.C., the NAM has 10 additional offices across the country.
Be sure to visit our award-winning web site at www.nam.org for more information about legislative, policy and workplace developments affecting manufacturers, employees and the economy.
I noticed your efficient and frugal use of words but I wanted to expand it for my own pleasure. Even then I forgot sexual harassment. How about all those taxes added to our phone bill? We could write a tome as to why businesses fail in America. That they have done as well as they have is a miracle.
Many consider the liberals to be stupid with their socialistic plans that do more harm than good. I think they plan it that way to destroy our way of life..
Agreed. Manufacturing output from the United States is still impressive. It just doesn't employ as many people as it once did due to innovation. Even so, some people just long for the days of repetitious, back breaking jobs.
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