Ernie :
Tell you one thing, it is overdue to bring back specific forms of  
protectionism.
Not to prop up inefficient industries or businesses, but for reasons of  
national
security. We simply cannot afford to have all of our electrical  
transformers
manufactured in Asia or Mexico, nor to no longer have a consumer  
electronics
business that is maybe 90% dependent on imports from Korea or France,
nor to only have the left overs of a steel industry.
 
The solution is simple :  A requirement to maintain  manufacturing capacity 
for
all industries identified as necessary for the nation's security,   
including
economic security. This cannot be sufficient to re-create the manufacturing 
 base
we once had,  but it would guarantee a "floor" for manufacturing jobs  and
a future for manufacturing industries. 
 
It is assumed that, to be competitive and to satisfy stock holders, that  
manufacturing
firms would strive to be efficient, that if robots can do the job, there  
will be robots
on assembly lines, etc,. But there is only so far any company can go with  
automation;
there would be jobs in these sectors.
 
For any kind of solution,  free trade ideology has to be scrapped,  thrown 
out,
relegated to history. We need managed trade, as free as feasible, 
but not as free as possible. Adam Smith , in terms of modern day  realities,
is a really poor guide to any economic policy worth the name.
 
Billy
 
 
=========================
 
 
3/28/2012 1:07:33 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, [email protected]  
writes:

Interesting  perspective. Anyone brave enough to read the full report to 
see if they're  on-base?



Let’s be clear here: We are not saying that  manufacturing is the only form 
of production, or that globalization is  bad. For example, the immense 
flowering of the creativity in the  wireless/social media/communication sectors 
are clearly a form of 21st  century production. The App Economy—the 
development and use of apps designed  for smartphones and social media—has 
created 
nearly 500,000 jobs since  the first iPhone came out, and will continue to 
create more.

Second,  we’re also not saying that trade is the only cause of job loss. 
Clearly one  impact of information technology has been to massively transform  
industries such as retailing, reducing the number of workers  needed.

However, the U.S. cannot afford to be in a position of  perpetually 
consuming more than it produces. We need to make the shift  from a consumption 
economy to a production economy in order to assure  long-term prosperity.



-- Ernie P.




_http://progressivepolicy.org/hidden-toll_imports-and-job-loss-since-2007_ 
(http://progressivepolicy.org/hidden-toll_imports-and-job-loss-since-2007) 



 
Hidden Toll: Imports and Job Loss Since 2007
 
(http://progressivepolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/03.2012-Mandel_Carew_Hidden-Toll_Imports-and-Job-Loss-Since-20071.pdf)
 “We have a huge 
opportunity, at this moment, to bring  manufacturing back…but we have to seize 
it.”
 With these words in his State of  the Union address, President Obama 
signaled that he is getting serious about  recapturing factory jobs that have 
been lost to imports. Since the speech, the  White House has outlined a series 
of policy measures intended to encourage  companies to ‘insource’ jobs from 
overseas, including changes in the tax code  and increasing domestic 
investment. 
True, many economists, both liberal and conservative, are skeptical that  
much can be done to bring back manufacturing jobs. They argue that American  
factories have become so efficient that they no longer need to hire many  
workers. “It’s totally implausible to think that there’s going to be a surge  
in manufacturing jobs,” Lawrence F. Katz, an economist at Harvard who 
served  in the Clinton Administration, told the New York Times. Christina 
Romer,  
former head of Obama’s Council of Economic Advisors, recently wrote in the 
New  York Times that “a persuasive case for a manufacturing policy remains 
to be  made.” 
But this skepticism about President Obama’s manufacturing initiative relies 
 on faulty official data. In fact, government statisticians are 
dramatically  undercounting the economic impact of imports from low-cost 
countries such 
as  China, as we will explain, in this paper and the accompanying policy 
memo,  “Trade-related Jobs Lost During the Great Recession.” The reason for 
this  statistical problem is an important economic concept known as “import 
price  bias.” 
After doing a preliminary adjustment for import price bias, we find that  
1.3 million jobs have been lost to rising imports since the recession started 
 in 2007, accounting for one-third of the private nonconstruction job loss. 
 Many of these are jobs that could potentially be brought back to this 
country  by appropriate incentives that encourage investment and job creation 
in 
the  U.S. We therefore conclude that President Obama’s manufacturing 
initiative,  combined with other “pro-production” policies, can potentially be 
a  
significant source of domestic jobs. 
We arrive at this hefty figure by adjusting the official data on trade and  
domestic production for low-cost imports, which are incorrectly treated in 
the  national income accounts. Correcting for this import price bias, we 
find that  nonpetroleum imports rose by $131 billion from 2007 to 2011, 
adjusted for  price changes, rather than the meager $14 billion rise in imports 
that the  official data shows (measured in 2011$). 
This uncounted import growth helps explain why federal stimulus measures  
did not generate as many jobs as expected. In fact, a hefty slice of fiscal  
stimulus—both tax cuts and spending increases—leaked overseas, boosting  
imports rather than domestic production. This leakage, in turn, explains why  
Obama’s manufacturing strategy is so necessary. We need to reinforce 
domestic  production in order to reaffirm the strength of the economy. 
Let’s be clear here: We are not saying that manufacturing is the only form  
of production, or that globalization is bad. For example, the immense  
flowering of the creativity in the wireless/social media/communication sectors  
are clearly a form of 21st century production. The App Economy—the 
development  and use of apps designed for smartphones and social media—has 
created 
nearly  500,000 jobs since the first iPhone came out, and will continue to 
create  more. 
Second, we’re also not saying that trade is the only cause of job loss.  
Clearly one impact of information technology has been to massively transform  
industries such as retailing, reducing the number of workers needed. 
However, the U.S. cannot afford to be in a position of perpetually  
consuming more than it produces. We need to make the shift from a consumption  
economy to a production economy in order to assure long-term prosperity. 
_Read  the entire report here._ 
(http://progressivepolicy.org/wp-content/uploads/2012/03/03.2012-Mandel_Carew_Hidden-Toll_Imports-and-Job-Loss-Since-200
71.pdf)  
This entry was posted on Tuesday, March 27th, 2012 at 9:37 am and is  filed 
under _Daily Fix_ (http://progressivepolicy.org/category/daily-fix) , 
_Policy Memo_ (http://progressivepolicy.org/category/policy-memo) . You can 
follow any responses to this entry  through the _RSS  2.0_ 
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-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community  
<[email protected]>
Google Group: _http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism_ 
(http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism) 
Radical  Centrism website and blog: _http://RadicalCentrism.org_ 
(http://radicalcentrism.org/) 



-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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