Made In America. Not China.
Fascinating collection of articles over at Forbes Magazine on American manufacturing and how it does and should compete with China. The introduction gives a good description of the themes the articles.
Made in America meant something very different 30 years ago. It will mean something very different 30 years from now. All we can do is make good guesses. The facts are that 12 million adults make something for a living in the U.S., and their output accounts for $1.6 trillion, one-fifth of world manufacturing, more than that of any other nation. Yet our unprecedented manufacturing muscle is, to many, and justifiably so, in a state of crisis. Those 12 million jobs were once 19.5 million jobs. Since its peak in 1979, factory employment has never stopped falling. The hard truth? It never will. Manufacturing is always in crisis. Productivity eliminates jobs here, in China, in Mexico and everywhere. Making goods will continue to play an important part in our economy, but it will employ a smaller workforce. The growth will be in the ideas that come with the hands: innovation, automation and customization. Hands have skill; people have passion.
I have read two so far and was impressed. What do you think?

Comments (2)
Read through and enter the discussion by using the form at the endAnonymous - August 11, 2009 6:06 PM
And a link to the article?
Riccardo - August 12, 2009 3:26 AM
I want more! that's what I think. thanks!
I started getting the creeps when back in my teenage I would often call the railroad station to know when a train would leave and how much was due cause I had to travel quite often. The guys answering where sometimes slow, some othertimes very quick and precise, other times it was busy or when not, you could get a handful of extra information for the trips ahead. All this human presence on the phone was good. It was great when I started to miss it! i.e. the italian railways shut down the 24h man-operators and set in a brand new vocal recognition software talking to us as if we were recovering from dementia and what's more, not getting the job done 6 times out of 10. And it's no toll free number. So I say go ahead, governments should give people skill-jobs and craftmanship some levy and support.
More services but less employment? makes me think of the movie WALLEE. brr!