Globalization and manufacturing in
Indiana.
by Hicks, Michael
THERE'S NO WAY TO MISS the dramatic loss of manufacturing
employment Indiana has experienced in the past generation. Since about
1980, there has been a roughly 60 percent drop in the number of
manufacturing workers in the state. Why is this so?
Many Hoosiers blame globalization for these job losses (even if
they support free trade). There's plenty of anecdotal evidence by
way of Chinese-made toys (which litter the backseat of my minivan). But
once you get past this anecdote, the data tell a very different story.
09204429794 The U.S. imports more goods than it exports. I often hear
that this is both bad and unsustainable. But history tells us otherwise.
We've been running this trade imbalance since the 1970s, a period
of American economic ascendancy and dominance. Today the trade imbalance
(our exports minus imports) amounts to more than $800 billion. That is a
big number but to put it into perspective it is roughly the same amount
U.S. firms pay for advertising each year or about the size of the U.S.
movie industry But, how can we keep buying more than we're making?
There are three answers.
[GRAPHICS OMITTED]
The first is we're not. The trade data only counts the value
of goods shipped--it almost entirely misses the value of traded
services. So anytime a non-goods transaction occurs it is likely to be
missed. For example, if each of the 600,000 or so foreign students
studying at U.S. universities pays $30,000 for room and board we are
actually exporting $18 billion that's not captured by trade data.
Second, a good many developing countries are actually subsidizing U.S.
consumers indirectly (by keeping their currency undervalued). Third,
U.S. financial institutions are so safe that foreign depositors pay a
premium for this privilege. This foreign investment subsidizes our
consumption of goods.
In the end, only a trivial fraction of job losses in manufacturing
can be explained by foreign trade (I calculate less than 5 percent of
the total over the past 25 years). We have to look elsewhere for the
culprit. There are two other explanations. The first is that individual
businesses are increasingly outsourcing specific non-production line
tasks. So jobs ranging from human resources to custodial work that used
to be counted as a manufacturing job are now performed under contract by
another firm. Thus, a part of the loss in manufacturing (and growth in
services) is then a statistical artifact of how jobs are counted. But
this doesn't explain even a quarter of the job losses.
The fundamental cause of most of our manufacturing job losses is
simply increasing worker productivity. Since the late '70s the U.S.
population has been rising by about 1.1 percent per year, but the value
of manufactured goods produced by each worker has been rising by 4
percent per year. The higher demand for goods (due to higher population)
is heavily outpaced by the productivity growth of manufacturing workers.
The mathematics are daunting. With 4 percent productivity growth per
year, it takes only 18 years for a manufacturing worker to double the
value of the goods he or she produces (in inflation-adjusted dollars).
If you add the overall population growth rate--as a good measure of
growing demand--then factories can cut their labor force by 50 percent
every 22 years. That's just about what has happened in Indiana over
the past generation.
The real question about manufacturing jobs isn't why so many
have disappeared, but why so many still remain?
--Michael Hicks is director of the Bureau of Business Research at
Ball State University.
LATEST PREVIOUS YEAR %
PERIOD PERIOD AGO CHANGE
EMPLOYMENT (000)
U.S. SEP 07 138,265.0 138,155.0 136,636.0 1.2
INDIANA AUG 07 2,976.5 2,954.6 2,957.3 0.6
MANUFACTURING EMPLOYMENT (000)
U.S. SEP 07 13,983.0 14,001.0 142,006.0 -1.6
INDIANA AUG 07 561.1 556.6 568.4 -1.3
NON-MANUFACTURING EMPLOYMENT (000)
U.S. SEP 07 124,282.0 124,154.0 122,430.0 1.5
INDIANA AUG 07 2,415.4 2,398.0 2,388.9 1.1
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES (%)
U.S. SEP 07 4.7 4.6 4.6
INDIANA AUG 07 4.8 4.5 5.0
ANDERSON AUG 07 6.8 6.3 6.2
BLOOMINGTON AUG 07 4.3 4.1 4.5
COLUMBUS AUG 07 3.6 3.4 4.0
ELKHART/GOSHEN AUG 07 4.7 4.5 4.6
EVANSVILLE AUG 07 4.8 4.5 4.7
FORT WAYNE AUG 07 5.0 4.7 4.8
GARY/HAMMOND AUG 07 5.1 4.6 5.8
INDIANAPOLIS AUG 07 4.3 3.9 4.4
KOKOMO AUG 07 5.2 3.9 5.9
LAFAYETTE AUG 07 4.2 4.0 4.2
MICHIGAN CITY AUG 07 5.2 4.7 5.4
MUNCIE AUG 07 5.7 5.6 5.9
SOUTH BEND AUG 07 5.1 5.1 5.1
TERRE HAUTE AUG 07 5.8 5.4 6.5
PERSONAL INCOME ($BILLIONS)
U.S. AUG 07 11,775.0 11,734.0 11,028.0 6.8
INDIANA IIQ. 07 213.8 211.5 202.5 5.6
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING PERMITS
INDIANA AUG 07 1,973 1,976 2,238 -12
U.S. employment figures are seasonally adjusted.
Principal Source: Ball State University, Bureau of Business Research.
COPYRIGHT 2007 Curtis Magazine Group,
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.