Sunday, December 18, 2011

Manufacturing jobs are making a come back in America

For once I may have been ahead of the curve. With prosperity wages rise. And that has happened (and continues to happen) in China. Great for the up and coming Chinese workers, but with the higher labor costs it is increasingly less competitive to buy imported goods than to produce them domestically. On top of the increasingly anti-competitive Chinese manufacturing sector, other countries, such as Germany, Brazil and Japan, that traditionally have strong capabilities to produce goods, are battling numerous headwinds of their own. On top of all that, the big jump in petroleum prices has driven a huge boom in domestic energy production, largely through tapping our gas fields. The net effect is that U.S. manufacturing has been growing to the point of almost being in a boom. Walter Russell Mead puts it very concisely:

There are still obstacles to overcome: Growth in manufacturing is largely attributable to new discoveries of and better methods of extracting natural gas and oil. These are not the Solyndra style subsidized and government planned “green jobs” our social and cultural betters somehow assumed would drive the return of American manufacturing, but they are jobs nonetheless.
Another problem is that it is becoming increasingly difficult for American manufacturers to recruit skilled labor. Manufacturing has grown increasingly technical but the supply of people with the ability and energy to operate heavy machinery hasn’t increased. We’ve got to get better at helping young people who don’t much care for academics to get the training they need to cash in on the brown jobs boom.  For a lot of the millennial generation, these brown jobs are their best path to a middle class life; we need a pro-brown jobs government that sees these jobs as a blessing not an eyesore.

I think maybe the Republican candidate who first realizes, and then embraces, the new era of American manufacturing will win and in the end we will prosper. The best way out from under the crushing debt that the current administration has buried us under is to grow the economy to support and ultimately satisfy those obligations.

3 comments:

Quizikle said...

The US has both capability and resources. We need to rebuild because government policies have encouraged the break-up of the American infrastructure since the mid-80s.

The active discouragement of our energy and resource production capabilities: refineries, power plants, mining & smelting at the same time declaring the need to "lessen dependence on foreign supplies".

The outsourcing of our labor and manufacturing via tax laws.

Forcing expensive, ineffective, and inefficient government-mandated "greenie" **** for the benefit of Al Gore and a few political contributors (anyone think ethanol subsidies and Iowa's position in the election process is a coincidence?)

If government wants to create jobs ... well, that's an oxymoron. Government can't create jobs, government can only get in the way. I wish DC would quit blathering about "creating jobs"; to allow proper creation of jobs means lessening DC's influence.

A necessary and past time event

There is hope ... depending on what happens next November.

Maybe - nah, no maybe about it - it's time for an American Spring.
Q

2cents said...

It is going to get interesting since Obama obviously thinks his only hope is an "income inequality" theme. I.e. class warfare. I.e. tax and regulate the productive people to give money to the unproductive people. But recent polls show that the American elecotorate are too smart for that.

2cents said...

I'm back.