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Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin

(137,388 posts)
Mon Feb 13, 2023, 05:08 PM Feb 2023

Comeback in factory jobs is real and likely to grow

By Justin Fox / Bloomberg Opinion

For the first time since the late 1970s, U.S. employment in manufacturing has surpassed the peak set during the previous business cycle. This happened in May 2022, according to the revised 2022 payroll jobs data released last week by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. As of January 2023, the sector employed just short of 13 million Americans on a seasonally adjusted basis, the biggest number since November 2008.

After shrinking for three decades, manufacturing employment in the U.S. appears to have returned to growth. In the 2010s, this may have looked suspiciously like a dead-cat bounce after a decade of steep declines, and the latest BLS employment projections still estimate that manufacturing employment will fall by 139,400 from 2021 to 2031. Now that we’re almost 13 years into the new growth trend, I’m thinking that may be too pessimistic.

It’s not as if manufacturing is suddenly where all the work is. The sector, which accounted for more than a third of American jobs during World War II and stayed above 30 percent for most of the 1950s, is now at 8.4 percent of payroll employment and shrinking slowly. That pace represents a drastic change from the long decline of the previous half century, though.

One explanation for this shift is that globalization, while perhaps not going into reverse, is no longer proceeding at anything like its pace of the 1990s and 2000s. Manufacturers have been reassessing the risks and rewards of having supply chains spread across the planet and “reshoring” some production closer to consumers in the U.S. and elsewhere.

https://www.heraldnet.com/opinion/comment-comeback-in-factory-jobs-is-real-and-likely-to-grow/

Go dark Brandon!

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Comeback in factory jobs is real and likely to grow (Original Post) Yo_Mama_Been_Loggin Feb 2023 OP
Hope you are correct republianmushroom Feb 2023 #1
Thanks to Pres Biden, there's a push to renew American manufacturing NullTuples Feb 2023 #2
I'd love to see a return to Made in America BlueIdaho Feb 2023 #3

NullTuples

(6,017 posts)
2. Thanks to Pres Biden, there's a push to renew American manufacturing
Tue Feb 14, 2023, 03:02 PM
Feb 2023

The most visible examples right now are centered around electric cars and microchips, both industries that proved vulnerable during the Covid shutdowns in China. But they're carefully targeted, as each is surrounded by a cloud of smaller suppliers that should then grow up around them.

I also have a feeling that something similar is likely with the push to renew America's infrastructure.

BlueIdaho

(13,582 posts)
3. I'd love to see a return to Made in America
Tue Feb 14, 2023, 08:32 PM
Feb 2023

The global supply chain has not been such a great thing for the American worker.

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