Contrarian but well-argued. I mostly agree. 

E



Decline of U.S. Manufacturing—Posner
http://www.becker-posner-blog.com/2012/04/decline-of-us-manufacturingposner.html

 The only secure ground for the government’s subsidizing a producer is that the 
goods or services that he sells are likely to confer external benefits, which 
is to say benefits that, because they are not paid for by the buyers, do not 
contribute to covering the producer’s costs. The total social benefits, private 
as well as public, that his production creates may exceed his costs, but he 
will not produce if the private benefits (the payment he receives from 
customers) do not cover those costs. 

Some manufactured products, vaccines for example, confer external benefits: 
when most of the population is vaccinated against some disease, the risk to the 
rest of the population may be so slight that they stop buying the vaccine: they 
are benefiting from it but not paying for it. Another example is intellectual 
property that, in the absence of patent or copyright protection, could easily 
be copied: the original producer of the intellectual property would be 
conferring benefits on the copiers for which he would not be paid. 

External benefits are actually rather pervasive in manufacturing as in other 
sectors of the economy. For example, consumers who value a product much more 
than its market value derive an external benefit, because (by definition) the 
manufacturer does not capture this “consumer surplus [value].” But there is no 
reason to think that manufacturing confers greater external benefits than other 
sectors. 

There is a general anxiety about becoming dependent on foreign nations for 
products that are vital to our nation. That is a legitimate concern when one is 
talking about products that are essential for national security or economic 
welfare, such as military aircraft; and obviously our military production is 
heavily and justifiably paid for largely by the government, although some is 
paid for by foreign buyers. The foreign “products” that might be thought 
essential to our security and welfare are not manufactured goods at all, but 
commodities such as oil and rare earth metals. The United States is still the 
world’s largest manufacturing country, accounting for a fifth of total world 
industrial output. 

Becker points to the analogy of agriculture. Employment in agriculture has 
plummeted, leading to anxieties spurred by agricultural companies about the 
decline of the “family farm” and the loss of the imagined virtues of the 
independent farmer, to combat which agriculture continues to be heavily 
subsidized. The subsidies are widely recognized to be a pure social waste, and 
the same would be true of subsidizing manufacturing. Like manufacturing, 
American agriculture is thriving with its historically small labor force. 

The decline in agricultural employment is a product of technological advance, 
and likewise the decline in manufacturing employment. Subsidizing manufacturing 
will no more increase employment in manufacturing than subsidizing agriculture 
has prevented the precipitous decline of agricultural employment, for a 
manufacturing subsidy will be used to speed the automation of manufacturing 
tasks and so accelerate the decline of manufacturing employment—unless the 
subsidy is conditioned on increased employment, which would would mean 
diverting workers from more to less productive work. We would not be better off 
if 40 percent of the labor force were in farming rather than 2.5 percent, or if 
28 percent of the labor force were in manufacturing rather than 9 percent. 

Some concern has been expressed that we need to boost manufacturing in order to 
reduce our trade imbalance, because many manufactured goods are exported. But a 
recent article in the New York Times (April 10) points out that the United 
States is the world’s largest exporter of services—and would be larger still if 
we took steps, such as loosening visa restrictions that impede international 
provisions of services and making the same efforts to pry open foreign markets 
to American services as we do to pry open foreign markets to American goods. 

The politicians know all these things. The push to promote manufacturing is 
political in origin and may (one hopes will) be abandoned after the election. 
Its political appeal is related partly to the fact that unions still have a 
foothold in manufacturing, and partly to the fact that America’s prowess in 
manufacturing (think of the vast output of munitions in World War II) is 
associated in the public mind with the epoch of greatest American world power. 

I have no objection to efforts to negotiate with foreign countries trade 
agreements that facilitate U.S. exports (they also of course facilitate 
imports—and that’s fine too). Such efforts are the centerpiece of the 
Administration’s program of stimulating employment in manufacturing. But the 
efforts should be extended to services. I can think of no rational basis for 
putting manufacturing ahead of services.

(via Instapaper)



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