- Mar 20, 2000
- 102,398
- 8,568
- 126
Included in the UAW materials pitching last week's GM deal was the usual lament blaming foreigners for GM's trouble, saying U.S. manufacturing "does not operate on a leveling playing field" with the rest of the world. Never mind that the UAW has been losing jobs not to foreign factories and workers, but to U.S. factories and workers not burdened by UAW contracts.
The myth plays into the hands of protectionists in both parties who bellyache about high-paying jobs supposedly being exported to China and India. Yet American manufacturing actually has been on a roll lately and job losses are almost exclusively a result of productivity gains -- which means U.S. workers are producing more output with less work, which generally translates into higher, not lower, wages.
According to a newly-released National Association of Manufacturers report, manufacturing wages are rising and during the last twelve months manufacturing workers earned "30 percent more than the average wage for the private sector workforce."
Meanwhile, the Cato Institute's Daniel Ikenson has been studying trends in manufacturing and reports: "Despite all of the bluster about 'saving' U.S. manufacturing, the truth is that the sector is in robust health. Record output, record sales, record profits, record returns on equity, and record compensation define the most recent year's performance."
Mr. Ikenson also says trade is responsible for the health of American manufacturing. How? For one thing, what the anti-globalists like CNN's Lou Dobbs can't seem to comprehend it that "greater access to raw materials and components has helped control costs of production, while greater access to foreign markets has been crucial to surging sales revenues." Mr. Ikenson reports that real manufacturing output in the U.S. has grown by 13% since China became a full member of the World Trade Organization in 2002.
A powerful real-life example of the manufacturing strength in the U.S. is Caterpillar in Peoria. It produces more tractors today than 15 years ago with 30% fewer man-hours. That's called productivity. And these Cat workers are UAW members with high pay and high benefits. According to a Caterpillar spokesman we interviewed: "The biggest increase in our business, by far, is tractors sold to China."
All of this seems overlooked by the media. A recent Boston Globe article was titled "Disaster relief needed for manufacturing." The real relief needed is in Congress, where more than a dozen bills aiming to narrow the scope of trade have been introduced since last November.
As Mr. Ikenson quips, "Reports of the death of U.S. manufacturing have been greatly exaggerated." Just don't tell anyone on Capitol Hill.
troubles of the automakers aside, looks like we're doing pretty well. now if only ford could figure out that they should be selling this rather than this.
hopefully the new CTS is a sign of things to come from GM.