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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
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Home > For the Public > News and Media > Speeches > 2011 > U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic
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U.S. Manufacturing and the
Economic Outlook

Additional Information
Sandra Pianalto

Introduction
The lobby of the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland has beautiful
historic paintings that capture the story of our region in the 1920s.
One painting is of a map that includes symbols that show the drivers
of economic activity in the country at that time. It reminded me of
the maps we used to draw when we were studying state history. The
teacher would give us a piece of paper with an outline of the state on
it, and then we would have to draw pictures that symbolized the
different businesses that were important to our state. I grew up in
Ohio and I remember drawing an airplane for Dayton, a steel mill and
auto plants in Cleveland, barns for farms across the state and, of
course, glass for Toledo. I'm sure some of you share that memory
with me.

President and CEO,
Federal Reserve Bank o f Cleveland
Global Interdependence
Center/University of Toledo
Toledo, OH

October 20, 2011

What would we draw on our state map today? Surely, things have
evolved over time. Today, I would sketch in universities, research
facilities and bio-medical centers. In addition to physical resources,
my map today would also focus on human resources and skills. But it
is important to note that all these years later, manufacturing would
still hold a prominent place on my map. Indeed, the primary focus of
my talk this afternoon will be about manufacturing and the forces
that are constantly at work reshaping the global manufacturing
economy -- technology, productivity, and location.
Before I turn my attention to these matters, however, I will first
present an overview of the current economic conditions facing the
country and briefly discuss the path of manufacturing through the
recovery. As always, the views I express are mine alone and do not
necessarily reflect those of my colleagues in the Federal Reserve
System.

Economic Outlook
This has been a painfully slow economic recovery. The recession
ended two years ago and yet we are just now returning to the output
levels we had reached before the recession began in late 2007. Yes,
we have had a few quarters of solid economic activity but mostly we
have had weak growth.
We all know that the United States is a consumer-driven economy.
Consumer spending makes up roughly two-thirds of GDP. In this
recovery consumers have been reluctant to increase spending in the
face of weak income growth and the loss of household wealth. In
fact, many households are focused on paying down debt and
increasing savings. Housing markets remain subdued, the government
sector is very constrained, and international markets are unsettled.
These headwinds continue to create challenges for businesses,

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
employees, and families.
Certainly, we have seen a few areas of strength in this recovery.
Business investment in equipment and software has been solid.
Exports have rebounded. After lackluster output growth in the first
half of this year, the third quarter looks like it was somewhat better,
with growth that I estimate to be roughly 3 percent. But overall, the
economy is still underperforming relative to past recoveries.
The net result of the recent weakness in output growth is that there
has been almost no rebound in the labor market. Unemployment
remains high, at over 9 percent, and job growth has been anemic.
Since the end of 2009, the U.S. economy has generated only 2.5
million new private-sector jobs. At the same time, public-sector
employment has declined by roughly 500,000 jobs. This means the
economy has gained back, on net, a little over 2.0 million jobs,
leaving us still short roughly 6.7 million jobs from the start of the
recession.
A particularly troubling aspect of our current unemployment problem
is the long duration of unemployment experienced by many
individuals. Nearly half of the unemployed have been out of work for
more than six months, and this statistic does not include the
substantial number of individuals who have simply left the labor
market. This level of long-term unemployment is unprecedented
since the Great Depression. The average duration of unemployment
today is about 40 weeks. This is double the previous high of 20
weeks, which occurred in 1984 following the 1982 recession.
Some people think that our recent recession has impaired our labor
markets, and that we must accept permanently higher unemployment
rates -- that is, we have seen a rise in structural unemployment. I
can understand why employment in homebuilding, for example, will
not return to pre-recession levels for a very long time. And it is true
that some skill sets of the unemployed no longer match well to those
skills currently needed by employers. However, based on research
from my staff, I think the most important reason for our high
unemployment rates is that spending by consumers, businesses, and
government still remains uninspiring. [i] In other words, these higher
rates of unemployment are predominantly cyclical in nature.
Indeed, my interpretation of the incoming data is that weakness in
overall spending explains current labor market conditions very well.
In the two years since the recovery began, GDP growth has averaged
only 2.5 percent, a lackluster performance by any measure. The
employment path we are on is a direct result of the weak output
growth we have experienced. To put this in context, we need a
growth rate of around 2 percent just to accommodate the new
entrants into the workforce. In order for the U.S. economy to make
substantial progress on reducing unemployment, economic growth
clearly needs to accelerate. Unfortunately, I don't expect the pace of
growth to pick up very soon; my outlook for real GDP growth in 2012
is about 2 percent, on par with the past two years.

Manufacturing in the Recovery
Now I'd like to turn to the experience of the manufacturing sector in
the recession and recovery. The weight of the recession fell heavily
on manufacturing, and I know that many of your own personal
experiences lie behind the summary statistics I am now going to
recite.
During the recession, production decreased by 20 percent,
employment fell by 16 percent, and over 2 million manufacturing jobs
were lost. The declines were widespread, and the subsequent
recovery of jobs has been modest. Production has risen but remains

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
well below pre-recession levels. Employment has rebounded, though
only by a few percentage points.
The manufacturing sector has experienced some growth during the
recovery with pockets of strength and weakness. On the positive side,
exporters, machinery producers, and high technology firms have
shown good growth. U.S. manufactured exports have risen briskly
over the last two years, aided by the value of the dollar. A common
link among these better-performing industries is that they
manufacture products that result in productivity improvements, and
thus improvements in their customers' bottom lines. Conversely,
manufacturing industries linked closely to the construction industry
have had almost no recovery. And, many industries that experienced
declining production prior to the recession, such as apparel and
textiles, have continued to struggle throughout the recovery.
I am pleased to note that the automotive sector -- a sector of critical
importance to the U.S. and Midwest economies -- has performed
reasonably well lately. Although U.S. domestic production remains
well below pre-recession levels, car and truck production continued
to expand moderately during the first three quarters of 2011, even in
the face of supply disruptions caused by the Japanese tsunami. The
modest progress made in the automotive sector reflects, in large
part, the constraints that households face: high unemployment, slow
income growth, and high debt levels.
While there is good and bad news on the output side of
manufacturing, there is little good news to report on the employment
front. During the recovery, manufacturing has added back only
300,000 workers - less than 15 percent of the 2 million manufacturing
jobs lost during the recession.

Long-term Prospects for U.S. Manufacturing
As the overall recovery gains more traction, manufacturing will
certainly benefit. However, the future of manufacturing in the U.S.
economy will be influenced by forces that have been reshaping
manufacturing over the last several decades - those being
technology, productivity, and location decisions.
Focusing first on technology, U.S. manufacturing has been both a
creator and an adopter of technology. While sometimes overlooked,
manufacturing remains an important center of innovation in the
United States. The National Science Foundation recently reported
that manufacturers accounted for roughly 70 percent of R&D
spending by U.S. businesses. These R&D investments translate into
new products and production methods and have the potential to raise
productivity both inside and outside the manufacturing sector.
Manufacturing is also a major adopter of new technologies, becoming
more capital intensive along the way. The business people I talk to
consistently tell me that new technological innovations have driven
down the relative price of machinery, which has further encouraged
manufacturers to modernize by investing more in new plant and
equipment.
However, the new technologies being adopted often require a
different type of workforce. These technologies favor the
employment of more highly skilled workers. Over the last several
decades, we have seen large employment reductions in blue-collar
and middle-skill occupations in manufacturing. At the same time, the
number of college-educated workers employed in manufacturing has
actually risen, so that the sector is now considerably more skill
intensive.
The improvements to technology, capital, and labor quality have

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
raised productivity both within manufacturing and in the economy at
large. In the two decades prior to the recession, labor productivity in
manufacturing roughly doubled, with output rising by 65 percent and
labor hours declining by 20 percent. This resulted in the loss of 3.7
million jobs in the prosperous decades before the onset of the job
losses in the recent recession. These twin trends of rising labor
productivity, along with reductions in labor usage, have only been
reinforced by the recession.
Let me make two quick points to put the rising productivity of U.S.
manufacturing in a global context. First, the broad shifts in output
and employment we have seen in manufacturing are not unique to
the United States. Almost all developed economies have experienced
expansions in manufacturing output along with significant declines in
employment over the last several decades. This is true in countries
running trade deficits, like the United States, but also in countries
running trade surpluses, such as Japan and Germany. Second, labor
productivity growth in U.S. manufacturing has substantially exceeded
labor productivity growth in manufacturing in many other developed
countries around the world. The United States remains a very
competitive manufacturing nation.
In the future, I expect these broad trends to continue. U.S.
manufacturers are likely to become even more capital and skill
intensive, leading to further productivity gains. How these trends
actually play out in terms of output and employment in the United
States, however, will depend on a set of other forces influencing the
environment that manufacturers operate in.
A particularly important force that I do want to discuss is location.
We are all familiar with that phrase that Realtors© use: location,
location, location. From my perspective, that same phrase also
applies to manufacturing. We need to understand first, what
determines the location of manufacturing production around the
world; second, what drives U.S. manufacturing firms to locate their
facilities in various places in the world; and third, what leads a
company to locate its production inside or outside the corporate
enterprise.
The location of manufacturing activity around the world continues to
move, as it always has. Manufacturing moved from Europe to the
United States in the 19th century, from the north to the south in the
United States over the latter parts of the 20th century, and from the
United States to Asia in the late 20th century, all following growth
opportunities. Today's newly emerging and developing countries such
as China, Thailand, and Brazil, have expanded their manufacturing
activity to meet both domestic and international demand as their
economies have grown and matured. This has changed the landscape
of global manufacturing once again.
Not only has total manufacturing activity been shifting location, but
which products get made where has changed markedly as well.
Developing economies have tended to produce labor-intensive, lowcost goods. Their growing presence on the world stage pits them
against those U.S. manufacturers that have also been using labor­
intensive techniques and have typically relied on less-skilled workers.
These industries, such as apparel and textiles, have suffered
substantial employment loss in the United States. In response, U.S.
manufacturers have shifted their product mix toward more skill­
intensive tasks, such as product design and development, and more
customized and highly skilled production, where the United States
retains a comparative advantage.
Still, even with this significant expansion of global production, the
United States remains home to an important fraction of the world's

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
manufacturing value added. The World Bank estimates the U.S. share
of worldwide manufacturing at roughly 20 percent for 2009, a little
higher than China's share. The difference, of course, is that China
and other emerging market countries have been rapidly increasing
their shares of manufacturing production and increasing exports. This
pressure to innovate and raise productivity is only likely to continue,
as I expect our trading partners to make additional investments in
manufacturing infrastructure, technologies, and human capital.
The second locational force that I see reshaping manufacturing and
the U.S. corporate sector more broadly is the globalization of firms.
Many U.S. firms have become international in scope - not only selling
worldwide but producing worldwide. Indeed, U.S. multinational
companies employ almost one-third of their workforce outside the
United States, and the proportion for manufacturing companies is
even higher, over 40 percent. Of course, some of this activity has
gone on for decades, but the growth of the global footprint for many
U.S. companies has accelerated.
The reasons behind this expansion are multifaceted. At the micro
level, some producers are looking to lower costs; some producers are
looking to get closer to their customer base; and some firms are
responding to incentives offered by host countries. There are also
macro forces at work pulling U.S. firms abroad. The overall costs of
international expansion have broadly declined due to changes in
technology and to improvements in host-country infrastructure,
human capital, and institutions. Trade policy has affected the
international environment, leading to greater openness in the world
economy and, as I said earlier, developing economies are growing
faster than developed economies.
What we know about this globalization process is that U.S.
multinationals have expanded markedly overseas in the last decade,
increasing employment and sales in their foreign affiliates. Clearly,
some of this shifting of activity represents the offshoring of
production for export back to the United States, but I would caution
against equating all foreign activity by U.S. multinational companies
with that practice. The majority of economic production of foreign
affiliates of U.S. multinationals simply remains abroad, much of it
servicing customers in local markets.
The final locational force I want to discuss is outsourcing - that is,
when a company decides to purchase goods or services from another
company rather than producing them in-house. Contracting out
activities can result in production moving to a location within the
same country or across borders, and has been driven by both costs
and technological change. The industrial structure of the automotive
sector has been reconfigured by such activity.
U.S. trade has been shaped by this outsourcing activity, as the
amount of imported intermediate goods into the United States has
risen sharply over the last decade. Consequently, demand for both
labor and capital has diminished in certain U.S. manufacturing
sectors, but at the same time has allowed some of our domestic
companies to gain efficiencies in their supply chains and expand
their overall production. Fundamentally, outsourcing--international or
domestic -- allows firms to become more specialized in the
production tasks in which they excel. Outsourcing provides one more
way for companies to remain profitable and more viable over time.
All of these locational forces influence where manufacturing takes
place. On balance, these forces have been pulling manufacturing
activity outside the United States. Going forward, however, this
shifting of production abroad is not a foregone conclusion. Indeed,
individual manufacturers will ultimately decide where the most
productive and profitable locations are, and they will respond

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland
accordingly. Their location decisions will certainly be influenced by
the infrastructure in place, trade and tax policies, and the regulatory
environment.
But one of the most important forces that will determine where
firms locate is the quality of human capital available in a region or
nation. We develop human capital through the investments we make
in education and training. These investments not only build the
needed workforce of the future, but also form the foundation of our
ability to innovate both in and outside of manufacturing. In the end,
these investments in human capital are what will help determine the
productivity and the standards of living of nations.
Unfortunately, the United States has been falling behind other
countries in the development of human capital, as measured by
educational performance. In a ranking of 24 developed countries by
the OECD, the United States slipped in terms of college graduation
rates from a ranking of 2nd in 1995 to 13th in 2008. This is not
because the United States is backsliding in college graduation rates,
but rather because other countries around the globe are passing us
by. In Ohio, we rank 38th out of the 50 states for the percentage of
the population with college degrees.
Clearly we need to improve our educational performance. I see
particular gaps in our education system around points of transition from home to kindergarten, from grade school to high school, from
high school to college, and from school to the workforce. These
transitions are particularly hard to navigate for individuals that are
not on a typical college degree track. And I fear it is increasingly
difficult for these individuals to obtain workforce skills and access to
job ladders that have solid career potential. So we need to respond
by making improvements to pre-K and K-through-12 education;
support for math, science, and engineering in higher education; and
funding for basic research. In some sense, we need a more robust
education supply chain, if you will, to increase the efficiency of our
educational investments and to improve the outcomes for our
children.

Conclusion
The painting in my Bank's lobby, which I mentioned at the beginning
of my remarks, would look mostly the same if it were painted today
as it did when it was painted in the early 1920s. The painting
recognizes the importance of manufacturing in the U.S. economy and
in the economy of the Midwest. But we now know what the painting
of the 1920s does not reflect - that the structure of manufacturing
continues to evolve rapidly. Manufacturing is being shaped by forces
of technology, productivity, and location. Manufacturing remains an
important part of a healthy U.S. economy, but it operates in a very
competitive environment. As an industry, manufacturing needs to be
agile in responding to the competitive environment, strive for
efficiency gains, and constantly update technology. As a country, in
order for us to remain competitive, we need to constantly improve
our human capital and workforce skills.

[i] "This Time May Not Be That Different: Labor Markets, the Great
Recession and the (Not So Great) Recovery." by Murat Tasci. 2011.
Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, Economic Commentary, 2011 -18.
[link is:
http://www.clevelandfed.org/research/commentary/2011/2011 -

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U.S. Manufacturing and the Economic Outlook :: October 20, 2011 :: Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland

" High Unemployment after the Recession: Mostly Cyclical, but
Adjusting Slowly." by Murat Tasci, 2011. Federal Reserve Bank of
Cleveland. Economic Commentary. 2011-02. [link is:
http://www.clevelandfed.org/research/commentary/2011/2011 02.cfm

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