An interesting economic snapshot by Will Kimball
and Susan Balding at the Economic Policy Institute provides us with a sense of
the strong connection between the U.S. trade deficit and the gutting of America's
manufacturing sector, a connection that has prolonged America's real unemployment problem.
Here is a graph showing
how the international trade deficit has blossomed since 1997:
From a low of $130.6
billion in 1997, the United States trade deficit with the rest of the world
grew to a peak of $558.5 billion in 2006, a 327 percent increase. In
2014, the trade deficit was $514.6 billion, the fourth highest level on record.
Here is a graph showing
how the number of U.S. workers employed in manufacturing has dropped since
1997:
At its peak in 1998,
17.56 million American workers were employed in the manufacturing sector.
This dropped to a low of 11.528 million in 2010, a drop of 6.032 million
workers or a loss of 34.4 percent.
Prior to the 2000 - 2001
recession, the manufacturing sector has typically regained most, if not all, of
the jobs lost during a recession as shown on this graph which shows both
the number of unemployed Americans and the number of Americans employed in the
manufacturing sector:
As you can see, from 1950
to 2000, the number of Americans employed in the manufacturing sector remained
between 13 million in 1950 and 19.5 million in 1979.
Things changed
substantially around the turn of the new millennium when the number of
manufacturing workers began to decline as you noted on the graph above.
This is particularly the case since the Great Recession. On this graph, you will notice that, even though
the number of unemployed Americans has decreased substantially since the end of
the Great Recession, the number of Americans employed in the manufacturing
sector has barely budged:
The number of Americans
employed in the manufacturing sector hit a 60 year low of 11.4 million in early
2010 and has risen to only 12.35 million in mid-2015, an increase of less than
1 million manufacturing jobs.
The rising trade deficit
and dropping manufacturing employment shows that United States manufacturers
are losing jobs to manufacturing industries in other nations, particularly
China. For example, here is a graph showing the net trade value in
goods with China since 1992:
When China entered the
World Trade Organization in December 2001, it was touted by U.S.
politicians as a game-changing deal for the American economy as shown in this speech given on March 8, 2000 by then-President Bill Clinton:
"Last fall, as all of you know, the United States signed the
agreement to bring China into the W.T.O. on terms that will open its market to
American products and investments.
When China concludes similar agreements with other
countries, it will join the W.T.O. But, as Lee said, for us to benefit from
that, we must first grant it permanent normal trading status, the same
arrangement we have given to other countries in the W.T.O. Before coming here
today, I submitted legislation to Congress to do that, and I again publicly
urge Congress to approve it as soon as possible.
Again, I want to emphasize what has already been said.
Congress will not be voting on whether China will join the W.T.O. Congress can
only decide whether the United States will share in the economic benefits of
China joining the W.T.O. A vote against P.N.T.R. (Permanent Normal Trade Relations) will cost America jobs as our
competitors in Europe, Asia and elsewhere capture Chinese markets that we
otherwise would have served." (my bold)
That said,
in the first ten years after joining the WTO, China
has accomplished the following:
- it is the world's second-largest economy
in GDP terms.
- it is the world's largest merchandise
exporter.
- it is the world's fourth largest
commercial services exporter.
This is what happened to
China's GDP and GDP per capita between 2001 and 2010:
This is what happened to
China's manufacturing industry between 2001 and 2011:
One last question in
closing this posting. Wouldn't America's ongoing real problem with high
unemployment (not the headline unemployment statistic touted by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics) be quite easily solved if America was still a manufacturing
stronghold? Unfortunately, recent moves by China that allowed its currency to devalue during the recent economic "near-miss" to make China's exports less expensive and imports less attractive to consumers , it is highly unlikely that there will be any meaningful change in the number of Americans employed in the manufacturing sector any time soon.
Great piece, we can not underestimate the importance of China, it has brought a huge and rapid shift in world trade. Much of the growth in China after 2008 came from a massive 6.6 trillion dollar stimulus program that expanded credit and poured massive amounts of money into the system. This money encouraged expansion and construction with little regard as to real demand or need. Every country has unofficial lenders, but in China individuals, companies and even local governments who can not get loans from state-controlled banks have been on a borrowing binge from these unofficial sources.
ReplyDeleteThese "shadow banks" have grown massive over the last several years as the Chinese have borrowed like crazy. According to some estimates, China’s banking system has grown from $10 trillion to $24 trillion since 2008. Now the reverse may happen, if the yuan weakens, the central bank will effectively have to buy its own currency using foreign reserves to maintain its peg. More about China's credit trap in the article below.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2014/03/china-and-great-credit-trap.html
Good post. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteThe US has 2 workforces that compete, unfairly. The one in the US (regulation+, costs relatively high) and the one in China (regulation nil, costs low). Those who produce for the US goods and services that can't fit in a container or go down an optic fibre i.e can't be imported or outsourced, don't have this competition and do very well. The other 80% are adrift, and getting poorer and poorer, but till lately, were maintaining their lifestyle with increasing debt - which a cancerous financial sector was happy to supply. They've been owing more and more of their "soul to the company store".
ReplyDeleteThe status quo cannot sustain. Free trade has been great for the US rich but a tragedy for the 80%, and the country. Barriers required. One of the first should be to restrian capital flows. The ability of capital to hurtle around the globe unrestrained makes it dangerous. it also gives it a grossly unfair advantage over labour and sovereigns - and inevitably it's abusing that advantage.