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question everything

(47,596 posts)
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 11:31 AM Oct 2020

China Trade War Didn't Boost U.S. Manufacturing Might

WASHINGTON—President Trump’s trade war against China didn’t achieve the central objective of reversing a U.S. decline in manufacturing, economic data show, despite tariffs on hundreds of billions of dollars of Chinese goods to discourage imports. The tariffs did succeed in reducing the trade deficit with China in 2019, but the overall U.S. trade imbalance was bigger than ever that year and has continued climbing, soaring to a record $84 billion in August as U.S. importers shifted to cheaper sources of goods from Vietnam, Mexico and other countries. The trade deficit with China also has risen amid the pandemic, and is back to where it was at the start of the Trump administration.

Another goal—reshoring of U.S. factory production—hasn’t happened either. Job growth in manufacturing started to slow in July 2018, and manufacturing production peaked in December 2018. Mr. Trump’s trade advisers nonetheless say the tariffs succeeded in forcing China to agree to a phase one trade deal in January, in which Beijing agreed to buy more U.S. goods, enforce intellectual property protections, remove regulatory barriers to agricultural trade and financial services and to not manipulate its currency.

(snip)

However, about 75% of the increase in manufacturing jobs occurred before the first tranche of tariffs took effect against China in July 2018, when annual growth in manufacturing jobs peaked and then began to decline. By early 2020, even before the pandemic reached the U.S., manufacturing job growth had stalled out, and factories shed workers in four of the six months through March.

An industry-by-industry analysis by the Federal Reserve showed that tariffs did help boost employment by 0.3%, in industries exposed to trade with China, by giving protection to some domestic industries to cheaper Chinese imports. But these gains were more than offset by higher costs of importing Chinese parts, which cut manufacturing employment by 1.1%. Retaliatory tariffs imposed by China against U.S. exports, the analysis found, reduced U.S. factory jobs by 0.7%.

More..

https://www.wsj.com/articles/china-trade-war-didnt-boost-u-s-manufacturing-might-11603618203 (subscription)


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China Trade War Didn't Boost U.S. Manufacturing Might (Original Post) question everything Oct 2020 OP
Well, there's a shock........ Sherman A1 Oct 2020 #1
BLS Manufacturing employment data series - table and graphs progree Oct 2020 #2

progree

(10,945 posts)
2. BLS Manufacturing employment data series - table and graphs
Tue Oct 27, 2020, 03:24 PM
Oct 2020

Graphs at links

Monthly changes from previous months
Negative months bold-faced
https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES3000000001?output_view=net_1mth
Year      J    F    M    A    M    J    J    A    S    O    N    D
2017:   13    15    11    5    6    12    -1    44    9    22    22    27   
2018:   17    30    23    21    26    29    19    13    21    24    20    21   
2019:   20    5    -3    2    0    9    7    3    3    -41    58    -2
2020:   -22    8    -46    -1317    240    333    41    36    66   


The total count by month
https://data.bls.gov/timeseries/CES3000000001

Below is for January of each year (in thousands):
``````````` Change from January of previous year
2017: 12369
2018: 12558 +189
2019: 12825 +267
2020: 12844 + 19

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