It’s understandable that voters are angry about trade. The U.S. has lost 
more than 4.5 million manufacturing jobs since NAFTA took effect in 
1994. And as Eduardo Porter wrote this week, there’s mounting evidence 
that U.S. trade policy, particularly with China, has caused lasting harm 
to many American workers. But rather than play to that anger, candidates 
ought to be talking about ways to ensure that the service sector can 
fill manufacturing’s former role as a provider of dependable, 
decent-paying jobs.

Here’s the problem: Whether or not those manufacturing jobs could have 
been saved, they aren’t coming back, at least not most of them. How do 
we know? Because in recent years, factories have been coming back, but 
the jobs haven’t. Because of rising wages in China, the need for shorter 
supply chains and other factors, a small but growing group of companies 
are shifting production back to the U.S. But the factories they build 
here are heavily automated, employing a small fraction of the workers 
they would have a generation ago.

full: 
https://fivethirtyeight.com/features/manufacturing-jobs-are-never-coming-back/
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
pen-l@lists.csuchico.edu
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to