- Factories boom, but with few new workers  Business - Stocks & economy


The U.S. manufacturing sector is roaring back after the worst recession in
generations. So why aren't factory jobs coming back as quickly? 

One big reason: Business executives like Drew Greenblatt, owner of
Baltimore-based Marlin Steel Wire Products, have figured out how to make
more widgets with the same number of workers. To do so, he's had to upgrade
the skills - and wages - of his employees. But his profits are bigger than
ever.  

Last July, the company, which makes wire baskets, installed $700,000 worth
of robots,  continuing a steady process of automation Greenblatt began when
he bought the company in 1998.

"In the old days, we had a $6 an-hour-guy who would hand-bend 300 bends an
hour," said Greenblatt. "Now we have guy who's paid $22 an hour with the
robots but he's giving me (20,000) bends an hour. Do the math."

For Greenblatt, the math goes like this: Last year, his revenues and profits
were up 12 percent - his best year since buying the company in 1998. That
year, Merlin Steel did $800,000 in sales with 18 workers. Today the company
has 25 employees and does $3.9 million in sales, exporting to 33 countries.

Automation raises productivity not just by making products faster; it also
makes them better, said Greenblatt. 

"It's better quality, so we have a lot less rework," he said. "We have more
reorders because the client is delighted. And we ship faster because we're
not going back and fixing things."

Productivity gains like those continue to show up throughout the
manufacturing sector. The level of output per hour worked rose by 2.6
percent in the last three months of 2010, the Labor Department reported
Thursday. 

A separate report by the Commerce Department showed that U.S. factory orders
rose in December, pushed higher demand from businesses for machinery and
communications equipment. Orders have risen in five of the past six months. 

The rise in orders has prompted manufacturers to boost hiring. On Friday,
the government reported that the sector added 49,000 new jobs in January -
even as bad weather dampened employment gains for other industries. 

Productivity is a pretty simple concept: It's a measure of how much stuff a
worker makes in a given number of hours. But increases in U.S. productivity
are the result of complex forces that have been reshaping the manufacturing
workforce for decades and are expected to continue.

Recently, productivity got a boost from the fallout of a harsh recession
that put weaker, less-productive companies out of business or forced them to
sell out to stronger, more productive competitors. 

Widespread job cuts during the recession also transformed the workforce on
individual factory floors, said Greenblatt.

"The guys that are the survivors are the most proficient, the smartest, the
hardest-working,  best character people," said Greenblatt. "And those people
make more widgets per hour."

Productivity has also risen as American manufacturers have moved to
specialize in more valuable products, sending manufacturing of cheaper goods
overseas where wages are lower. As the value of American-made products has
risen, so too has the average level of output per worker when measured in
dollar terms.

For example, an aerospace engineer who designs a landing gear for a Boeing
777 adds a lot more to U.S. GDP than a high school graduate bending metal
into a dish washer. As the overall mix of American-made goods becomes more
valuable, the U.S. economy produces more in dollar terms with same number of
workers. So the economy becomes more "productive."

"A lot of the low-end and basic commodities are now produced somewhere
else," said Tom Runiewicz, an economist at IHS Global Insight who follows
the manufacturing sector. "That means products higher up the value chain are
manufactured here."

Demand for high-end goods 
Rising global demand for high-end, capital intensive goods is boosting
exports for American manufacturers like Oshkosh Corp., a Wisconsin-based
maker of high-end, heavy-duty specialty trucks. The company recently began
hiring to keep up with increased demand from overseas customers and to fill
a new truck order from the Defense Department.

"We're ramping up from about 10 trucks a day to 40 to 45 in about another
seven or eight  months," Oshkosh CEO Charlie Szews told CNBC this week. "So
it's going to mean 650, 750 jobs for the Oshkosh community."

The order will also mean about $1 billion in business for the company's
suppliers, said Szews.

Manufacturing high-end products like fire trucks or military vehicles
requires piles of capital to build the cutting edge plants and buy the
sophisticated equipment needed to make them. Though American manufacturers
have been slow to re-hire workers, they've been making big bets on capital
investment coming out of the recession, especially in high tech products.

"Production of high-tech goods has become a bigger proportion of overall
manufacturing output," said Paul Ashworth, chief U.S. economist at
Toronto-based Capital Economics. "That also skews the average productivity
figures because productivity grows much faster in those industries."

At some point, productivity gains could become harder and harder to achieve
and begin tapering off. But economists like Runiewicz say American
manufacturers are a long way from reaching that point. 

"We are still in a period of this increasing productivity," he said.
"Mechanization and computerization is still advancing."

But while automation is advancing, millions of low-skilled factory workers
are being left behind, said Runiewicz.

"The unskilled production worker is become more and more obsolete," he said.
"This is something that been going on for years, but the recession has
accelerated the process because it's shaken out the lower productivity
firms."

Higher completion rates for college diplomas and a boom in admissions to
technical schools and community colleges are helping to upgrade worker
skills. Some of the burden is also falling on employers like Greenblatt.

"A lot of schools are graduating kids that can't do fifth-grade math, so
it's hard for us to teach people to program a robot when they don't even
know how to use a tape measure," he said. "We have had to do a lot of
training and a lot of upgrading to find talent that can read a blueprint and
understand how to program a computer."

Improved access to training, along with booming exports, will help. But most
economists expect the jobless rate to remain stubbornly high - especially
among lower-skilled workers. Without a more robust economic expansion, it
will be years before those factory workers sidelined by the recession will
begin collecting a paycheck again, according to Dean Baker, co-director of
the Center for Economic and Policy Research. 

"Even in the best case scenario you could make, I can't imagine you could
look to make up the up the gap with increased exports in seven, eight or
nine years," he said.

Many of those workers may never get back to work, said Baker.

"Long-term unemployment is really debilitating," he said. "Obviously it's a
real strain on the families. But it also leads people to lose their
connection to the workforce. If they're unemployed for a year or two - a lot
of those people never get another job."

C 2011 msnbc.com Reprints <http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3303539/ns/about/> 

 

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