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question everything

(47,535 posts)
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 10:33 PM Dec 2016

Economists Doubt the U.S. Can Regain Many of the Factory Jobs Lost in Recent Decades

Pulling off a renaissance in U.S. manufacturing employment will be extraordinarily tough.

After hitting a record of nearly 20 million in 1979, the number of American factory workers has plunged during each of the last five recessions and each time has never recovered. Today, 12.3 million people are employed in U.S. factories, a loss of nearly eight million jobs.

Forecasters in The Wall Street Journal’s monthly survey of economists doubt the numbers of bygone years can be restored. They estimate the U.S. will add about 7,000 manufacturing jobs by the end of 2017, about 40,000 by the end of 2018 and about 50,000 by the end of 2019, according to the average forecast—moving upward in coming years, but at a pace far too slow to replace what has been lost. “Manufacturing employment is now back to 1941 levels and falling,” said James Smith, chief economist of Parsec Financial. “This is a global trend and not at all specific to the U.S. It is caused by labor productivity growth.”

(snip)

The decline in manufacturing employment became a flashpoint during the presidential election. President-elect Donald J. Trump has vowed to renegotiate U.S. trade deals so American workers are better protected from foreign competition. Last week, he traveled to Indianapolis to announce that Carrier Corp. would retain about one-third of the jobs at an Indiana factory that previously were going to be entirely shipped to Mexico.

Yet many of the economists in the survey agree with Mr. Smith that the biggest reason so many fewer people work in today’s factories are advances in automation. Improvements in assembly-line technologies and the deployment of industrial robots allow U.S. manufacturers to produce more goods than ever before, but with much smaller workforces. Even if all outsourcing were ended immediately, the march of technology would put steady downward pressure on manufacturing employment.

(snip)

But even the optimists concede that significant missteps remain a possibility. In an open-ended question about the biggest risk to the economy, the most common response (from 46% of respondents) was the potential for trade to deteriorate. After all, the U.S. has an $18 trillion economy, but the world’s is more than $73 trillion. A deterioration or collapse of international trade relationships could see U.S. factories facing less competition over the domestic economy while increasingly being locked out of the much larger global economy.

http://www.wsj.com/articles/economists-doubt-the-u-s-can-regain-many-of-the-factory-jobs-lost-in-recent-decades-1481209203

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Economists Doubt the U.S. Can Regain Many of the Factory Jobs Lost in Recent Decades (Original Post) question everything Dec 2016 OP
Automation is killing jobs worldwide. roamer65 Dec 2016 #1
You beat me to it. Automation happened and it's not going away. AgadorSparticus Dec 2016 #2

roamer65

(36,747 posts)
1. Automation is killing jobs worldwide.
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 10:52 PM
Dec 2016

The US, China, Japan...the list goes on ad on.

A basic universal income is going to become a necessity.

AgadorSparticus

(7,963 posts)
2. You beat me to it. Automation happened and it's not going away.
Thu Dec 8, 2016, 10:54 PM
Dec 2016

People are going to have to change with the changing economy.

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