Bikewer
Penultimate Amazing
Listening to NPR most of the day as I do, you get political commentary from all sides. Seems that a lot of lip service is being given to re-establishing/re-invigorating the manufacturing sector in the US.
This from Democrats, Republicans,and Tea Party types as well.
Everyone wants a return to a vigorous manufacturing sector with plentiful and lucrative jobs for all who want them...
Sounds nice, but is this at all realistic?
Way back in the mid-eighties, futurist Alvin Toffler wrote The Third Wave, in which he proposed that the US was rapidly moving into what he termed a Third Wave economy; one focused on information technology, service, and so forth.
(manufacturing was "second wave", and "first wave" was "pre-industrial")
All through the nineties, this seemed to be the brunt of commentary that I recall; that we were now in a "service" economy, and that we were ceding manufacturing to countries like China and S. Korea.
Now, in a relative sudden... We are talking about manufacturing again.
How can the US compete with China, Korea, Mexico, India, and other such countries where vastly lower labor prices will keep the price of manufactured goods well under what we can manage in the US?
Although going to very high-tech automated plants can help, this means fewer jobs, save perhaps for the robotic industry...
At the same time, the vision of re-training all those factory workers who lost their jobs due to overseas competition to be IT workers has never materialized to any great degree, at least as far as I can tell.
Seems to me that much of this is just lip service for the benefit of the numerous unemployed, without much if any chance of actually coming to be.
This from Democrats, Republicans,and Tea Party types as well.
Everyone wants a return to a vigorous manufacturing sector with plentiful and lucrative jobs for all who want them...
Sounds nice, but is this at all realistic?
Way back in the mid-eighties, futurist Alvin Toffler wrote The Third Wave, in which he proposed that the US was rapidly moving into what he termed a Third Wave economy; one focused on information technology, service, and so forth.
(manufacturing was "second wave", and "first wave" was "pre-industrial")
All through the nineties, this seemed to be the brunt of commentary that I recall; that we were now in a "service" economy, and that we were ceding manufacturing to countries like China and S. Korea.
Now, in a relative sudden... We are talking about manufacturing again.
How can the US compete with China, Korea, Mexico, India, and other such countries where vastly lower labor prices will keep the price of manufactured goods well under what we can manage in the US?
Although going to very high-tech automated plants can help, this means fewer jobs, save perhaps for the robotic industry...
At the same time, the vision of re-training all those factory workers who lost their jobs due to overseas competition to be IT workers has never materialized to any great degree, at least as far as I can tell.
Seems to me that much of this is just lip service for the benefit of the numerous unemployed, without much if any chance of actually coming to be.