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Knightskye
12-08-2008, 01:25 AM
http://www.reason.com/blog/show/130426.html

They link to a column, but quote the relevant parts.


Indeed, until the globalization of the financial crisis, American manufacturing exports were reaching record levels. Overall, U.S. industry has become among the most productive in the world – output has doubled over the past 25 years, and productivity has grown at a rate twice that of the rest of the economy. Far from dead, our manufacturing sector is the world's largest, with 5% of the world's population producing five times their share in industrial goods. [...]

Fortunately, the Big Three do not represent the entire picture of American manufacturing. Even within the Great Lakes region, Wisconsin, which ranks second in per capita employment in manufacturing, has held onto most of its industrial employment due to its large, highly diversified base of smaller-scale specialized manufacturers.

If Congress and President Obama want to figure out how to restart our industrial economy, they need to travel not to Detroit but to an alternative universe that includes the South and Appalachia, where most of the new foreign-owned auto manufacturers have clustered. States like Alabama, with the second-largest per capita concentration of auto-related jobs, as well as South Carolina, Tennessee, Kentucky, Georgia and Mississippi, have been growing these high-wage jobs for a new generation. In the process, they have brought unprecedented opportunity to some of the nation's historically poorest regions.

Chase
12-08-2008, 04:15 AM
I'm very skeptical of this as the original author fails to cite the source of his statistics. If he's using government numbers, it's definitely a big lie, because the government routinely cooks the books.

socialize_me
12-08-2008, 06:44 AM
Germany has the most productive manufacturing base in the world, but America is definitely a close second. The problem is the cost of American labor and the unions here in America. Chinese factories and workers are not at all productive, but this is irrelevant as China doesn't have to compete with irrational demands of labor unions.

Pete
12-08-2008, 07:57 AM
Ho-hum, yes, weapons and high-end medical equipment are big exports. Problem is that these high value added products require little labor and are immensely profitable, hence little ripple effect in the economy, and no trickle-down as the big bucks go straight to Wall Street and the NWO.

Knightskye
12-08-2008, 11:14 PM
Ho-hum, yes, weapons and high-end medical equipment are big exports. Problem is that these high value added products require little labor and are immensely profitable, hence little ripple effect in the economy, and no trickle-down as the big bucks go straight to Wall Street and the NWO.

The NWO needs an ultrasound?