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|    alt.politics.economics    |    "Its the economy, stupid"    |    345,374 messages    |
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|    Message 343,524 of 345,374    |
|    davidp to All    |
|    =?UTF-8?B?4oCcV2Ugd2FudCB0byBiZSBtYXN0ZX    |
|    09 Apr 23 23:56:25    |
      From: lessgovt@gmail.com              America Is Back in the Factory Business       By John Keilman, April 8, 2023, WSJ              Production at U.S. factories rose last year, but few things were produced at a       more furious pace than factories themselves.              Construction spending related to manufacturing reached $108 billion in 2022,       Census Bureau data show, the highest annual total on record—more than was       spent to build schools, healthcare centers or office buildings.               New factories are rising in urban cores and rural fields, desert flats and       surf towns. Much of the growth is coming in the high-tech fields of       electric-vehicle batteries and semiconductors, national priorities backed by       billions of dollars in government        incentives. Other companies that once relied exclusively on lower-cost       countries to manufacture eyeglasses and bicycles and bodybuilding supplements       have found reasons to come home.              The pursuit of speed and flexibility prompted sock manufacturer FutureStitch       Inc., which has factories in China and Turkey, to open a new one in Oceanside,       Calif., last summer—the company’s first in the U.S.              CEO Taylor Shupe said retailers don’t want to carry excess inventory in       their stores, and the U.S. factory allows the company to quickly replenish       stock. Time is also of the essence to sell socks commemorating events like the       NBA Finals or the Kentucky        Derby, he said.              He said the company is keeping its overseas factories but is adding a second       in the U.S.—and maybe eventually a third—as it develops new products.              “There is more and more equity around ‘Made in the USA,’ ” said Mr.       Shupe. “To me, this is here to stay.”               Manufacturing has always been an integral part of American life. Paul Revere       opened a foundry that produced bells and cannons following his famous midnight       ride. Henry Ford’s assembly line made cars affordable to the masses. And       U.S. industrial might        helped win World War II, when nearly half of private-sector employees worked       in factories.              That portion plunged after the war, thanks to automation and U.S. companies       seeking lower costs overseas. Production capacity, which had grown at about 4%       a year for decades, flattened after China’s 2001 entry into the World Trade       Organization.              But last year U.S. production capacity showed its strongest growth since 2015       after pandemic-driven shortages and delays caused manufacturers to rethink       their far-flung supply chains, said UBS industrials analyst Chris Snyder.               “Covid kind of pulled the covers off and showed everybody how much risk they       were exposed to,” Mr. Snyder said.               Today U.S. manufacturing employment is holding steady at about 10% of the       private sector, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, with nearly       800,000 jobs added in the sector over the past two years. The total number, 13       million, was virtually        unchanged in the latest BLS jobs report.              The industry is actually hurting for workers—about 800,000 more are needed,       according to the National Association of Manufacturers—leading to concerns       that labor shortages and other bottlenecks could short-circuit the boom.               “I can bring back all the orders I want; there will be no one to make       them,” said Harry Moser, president of the Reshoring Initiative, which       advocates for bringing manufacturing jobs back to the U.S.               Huge govt incentives are stoking the frenzy. The Biden admin, seeing electric       vehicles and semiconductors as matters of national security, has devoted       billions of dollars to expanding those industries in the U.S. States are       kicking in billions more.              One result of that push can be seen in Lansing, Mich., the town where       Oldsmobile got its start in the late 19th century. In a field adjacent to a       General Motors Co. SUV factory, a vast skeleton of steel beams marks the       coming of the automotive industry’       s next phase.              The plant under construction belongs to Ultium Cells, a joint venture between       GM and LG Energy Solution Ltd., and it aims to start producing EV batteries in       late 2024. The factory shares a $2.5 billion federal loan with sister plants       in Ohio and        Tennessee. It has also received $666 million in state grants and a bargain       rate on electricity from the city’s utility.               Ultium said the factory will create more than 1,700 jobs. That’s not a huge       number by local standards—the state government, Michigan State University       and local hospitals each employ far more people—but Bob Trezise of the       Lansing Economic Area        Partnership said the suppliers that cluster around factories create a       multiplier effect, making them worthy of public support.              Hundreds of workers have swarmed over the site since construction began last       year. That inspired Debi Cheadle, who lives nearby, to buy a food truck to       serve burgers and burritos.               “I saw all the people coming and going and thought, ‘Let’s do something       that’s profitable and good for us, too,’” she said in mid-March as       lunchtime approached.              Lansing Mayor Andy Schor said the city is also wooing companies that make       semiconductors. Richard Branch, chief economist of the Dodge Construction       Network, which tracks building projects, said that industry, along with EV       battery companies, accounted        for nearly half of all U.S. manufacturing construction starts in 2022, as       measured in square footage.              Other new manufacturing lines are popping up in the Lansing area, taking       advantage of a well-trained local workforce. The Shyft Group Inc., which makes       specialty vehicles, is expanding its factory southwest of the city to build a       new line of electric        trucks and vans. Neogen Corp., which makes food- and animal-safety products,       is building a three-story manufacturing facility near the city’s downtown.              About 20 miles north of Lansing, in the small town of St. Johns, an       Ireland-based maker of dairy products has built a plant that each day turns 8       million pounds of milk into sacks of whey protein and blocks of cheese as big       as dishwashers.               The factory is a joint venture between the company, Glanbia Nutritionals, and       two cooperatives representing local dairy farmers. The facility opened in late       2020, and since hitting full capacity, processes a quarter of the milk       produced by Michigan’s        cows.                      [continued in next message]              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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