From: NYTimes.com [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, December 07, 2012 11:15 AM
Subject: Bits Daily Update: Experts Are Skeptical About a Renaissance of U.S. 
Manufacturing

 


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Friday, December 7, 2012 

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Daily Report


 
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 Experts Are Skeptical About a Renaissance of U.S. Manufacturing | Apple plans 
to join a small but growing number of companies that are bringing some 
manufacturing jobs back to the United States, drawn by the growing economic and 
political advantages of producing in their home market, report 
<http://p.nytimes.com/email/re?location=4z5Q7LhI+KVBjmEgFdYACPLKh239P3pgumqrnQdLD4pH+ykfX3VtzThh+FfPaZtpUrBeOrTBWLNCVQHAYSCK6I1RnAV0jf7O8/Buis63XogEPt5p3n4GBi+UGADt5ph4QQsgDIjkyjmt8TxfRODAGCh+6YpVRsJcCluD6CI7RWIGxedGp5dUDw==&campaign_id=688&instance_id=23427&segment_id=42055&user_id=5f5a69e70bdbc8fbc53066c386be797f>
  Catherine Rampbell and Nick Wingfield in Friday's New York Times. But some 
experts remain skeptical that the move will inspire a broader renaissance in 
American manufacturing.


On Thursday, Apple's chief executive, Timothy D. Cook 
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 , who built its efficient Asian manufacturing network, said the company would 
invest $100 million in producing some of its Mac computers in the United 
States, beyond the assembly work it already does in the United States. He 
provided little detail about how the money would be spent or what kinds of 
workers might benefit.


"I find it hard to see how the supply chains that drive manufacturing are going 
to move back here," Andre Sharon 
<http://p.nytimes.com/email/re?location=4z5Q7LhI+KUK28t4lt/CPY627bBRgzPGcsPZVIMHRQbJK+gFibm+GVVkPm3sJd1H&campaign_id=688&instance_id=23427&segment_id=42055&user_id=5f5a69e70bdbc8fbc53066c386be797f>
 , a professor at Boston University and director of the Fraunhofer Center for 
Manufacturing Innovation, told The Times. "So much of the know-how has been 
lost to Asia, and there's no compelling reason for it to return. It's great 
when a company says they want to create American jobs - but it only really 
helps the country if those are jobs that belong here, if it starts a chain 
reaction or is part of a bigger economic shift."


Over the last few years, companies across various industries, including 
electronics, automotive and medical devices, have announced that they are 
"reshoring" jobs after decades of shipping them abroad. Lower energy costs in 
America, rising wages in developing countries like China and Brazil, quality 
control issues and the desire to keep the supply chain close to the gigantic 
American consumer base have all factored into these decisions.


Even so, the impact on the American job market has been modest so far. Much of 
the work brought back has been high-value-added, automated production that 
requires few actual workers, which is part of the reason America's higher wages 
are not scaring off companies.


American manufacturing has been growing in the last two years, but the sector 
still has two million fewer jobs than it had when the recession began in 
December 2007. Worldwide manufacturing appears to be growing much faster, even 
for many of the American-owned companies that are expanding at home. General 
Electric, for example, has hired American workers to build water heaters, 
refrigerators, dishwashers and high-efficiency topload washers, but continues 
to add more jobs overseas as well.


Apple has not announced plans to move the complex, faster-growing portions of 
its product lines. Macs now represent a relatively small part of Apple's 
business, accounting for less than 20 percent of its nearly $36 billion in 
revenue in its most recent quarter. The company's iPad and iPhone products, 
which amount to nearly 70 percent of its sales, will continue to be made in 
low-cost centers of manufacturing like China, mostly on contract with outside 
companies like Foxconn.

 

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