Technology, Not Trade Or Regulations, Killed Manufacturing Jobs

 | Nov 24, 2016 12:53AM ET

Summary: Manufacturing output is at an all-time high. Manufacturing employment is at a post-industrialization low. Deregulation, dollar devaluation and protectionist/isolationist policies will not resurrect manufacturing employment.

The Economist:

In the early postwar decades, the American economy grew at a healthy clip. Millions of Americans earned a middle class wage by working in manufacturing. In recent decades, rising inequality and the stagnation of middle class earnings have generated a wave of nostalgia for the postwar economy, and for manufacturing employment in particular. If only America hadn't lost its manufacturing edge, all would be well.

You might reasonably guess that manufacturing in the US is in a secular downtrend. It's not. Real output is at an all-time high (ATH). It has nearly doubled in the past 30 years.


Why then do we believe otherwise? The answer is manufacturing employment, which has been in a long term secular decline. Manufacturing employment peaked in 1979. Today, it is about half of those levels.