About That Manufacturing Renaissance

The Biden Administration asserts there’s a “manufacturing renaissance” underway in the United States. Before it, the Trump administration claimed much the same. The federal government has certainly handed out a good deal of money to support manufacturing, in addition to aiding it with tariffs put in place by both Trump and Biden. But while manufacturing capacity, as measured by the Federal Reserve Board, has increased about 2.3 percent since Biden took office in 2021, labor productivity in manufacturing — basically, output per work hour — is down, according to figures released in early December. Total factor productivity, a measure of how industries improve technology and production processes to squeeze more output from a given quantity of inputs, fell in manufacturing in 2023 even as it rose in most other U.S. industries. These facts help explain why the Fed’s Industrial Production Index has been flat since the Obama years, save for a dip during the COVID-19 pandemic.

How does this square with the boom in factory construction and the many newspaper articles about new factories reviving down-at-the-heels communities? What seems to be going on is less a manufacturing renaissance than a restructuring. According to the Census Bureau, the computer, electronic, and electrical manufacturing sector has accounted for well over half of manufacturers’ construction spending this year, and construction in the transportation equipment sector is also strong. Meanwhile, construction in other manufacturing sectors has barely grown or even declined after accounting for inflation.

This is relevant to the much-discussed “reshoring” of manufacturing. To the extent that “reshoring” is underway, it seems to be concentrated in a handful of sectors, notably semiconductors, electric vehicle batteries, pharmaceuticals, and medical equipment. There are few signs of U.S.-made goods supplanting imports of industrial machinery, plastics and rubber products, synthetic fibers, paper, textiles, and any number of other products. Despite all the government support and the talk of tariffs, many manufacturers don’t seem to see the future in the United States.

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One thought on “About That Manufacturing Renaissance”

  1. Perhaps building Staxxon’s Folding Containers somewhere in the USA would jumpstart manufacturing. Initially expanding steel production, steel fabrication, paint production, plywood flooring, You could then write “The NEW Box”, that also created some ROI, and reduced port congestion and reduced pollution.

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