Grist for the mill, my friends. Read, digest, comment. This bears examination. This is what liberals will take on the hustings for 2012.
Making Things in America
By PAUL KRUGMAN
Published: May 19, 2011
Some years ago, one of my neighbors, an émigré Russian engineer, offered an observation about his adopted country. “America seems very rich,” he said, “but I never see anyone actually making anything.”

Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Paul Krugman
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That was a bit unfair, but not completely — and as time went by it became increasingly accurate. By the middle years of the last decade, I used to joke that Americans made a living by selling each other houses, which they paid for with money borrowed from China. Manufacturing, once America’s greatest strength, seemed to be in terminal decline.
But that may be changing. Manufacturing is one of the bright spots of a generally disappointing recovery, and there are signs — preliminary, but hopeful, nonetheless — that a sustained comeback may be under way.
And there’s something else you should know: If right-wing critics of efforts to rescue the economy had gotten their way, this comeback wouldn’t be happening.
The story so far: In the 1990s, U.S. manufacturing employment was more or less steady. After 2000, however, it entered a steep decline. The 2001 recession hit industry hard, while the bubble-fueled expansion of the decade’s middle years — an expansion marked by a huge rise in the trade deficit — left manufacturing behind. By December 2007, there were 3.5 million fewer U.S. manufacturing workers than there had been in 2000; millions more jobs disappeared in the slump that followed.
Only a handful of these lost jobs have come back, so far. But, as I said, there are indications of a turnaround.
Crucially, the manufacturing trade deficit seems to be coming down. At this point, it’s only about half as large as a share of G.D.P. as it was at the peak of the housing bubble, and further improvements are in the pipeline. The Boston Consulting Group, which is now predicting a U.S. “manufacturing renaissance,” points to major U.S. firms like Caterpillar that once shifted production abroad but are now moving it back. At the same time, companies from other countries, especially European firms, are moving production to America.
And one potential disaster has been avoided: the U.S. auto industry, which many people were writing off just two years ago, has weathered the storm. In particular, General Motors has now had five consecutive profitable quarters.
America’s industrial heartland is now leading the economic recovery. In August 2009, Michigan had an unemployment rate of 14.1 percent, the highest in the nation. Today, that rate is down to 10.3 percent, still above the national average, but nonetheless a huge improvement.
I don’t want to suggest that everything is wonderful about U.S. manufacturing. So far, the job gains are modest, and many new manufacturing jobs don’t offer good pay or benefits. The manufacturing revival isn’t going to make health reform unnecessary or obviate the need for a strong social safety net.
Still, better to have those jobs than none at all. Which brings me to those right-wing critics.
First, what’s driving the turnaround in our manufacturing trade? The main answer is that the U.S. dollar has fallen against other currencies, helping give U.S.-based manufacturing a cost advantage. A weaker dollar, it turns out, was just what U.S. industry needed.
Yet the Federal Reserve finds itself under intense pressure from the right to make the dollar stronger, not weaker. A few months ago, Paul Ryan, the chairman of the House Budget Committee, berated Ben Bernanke for failing to tighten monetary policy, declaring: “There is nothing more insidious that a country can do to its citizens than debase its currency.” If Mr. Bernanke had given in to that kind of pressure, manufacturing would have continued its relentless decline.
And then there’s the matter of the auto industry, which probably would have imploded if President Obama hadn’t stepped in to rescue General Motors and Chrysler. For those companies would almost surely have gone into liquidation, closing all their factories. And this liquidation would have undermined the rest of America’s auto industry, as essential suppliers went under, too. Hundreds of thousands of jobs were at stake.
Yet Mr. Obama was fiercely denounced for taking action. One Republican congressman declared the auto rescue part of the administration’s “war on capitalism.” Another insisted that when government gets involved in a company, “the disaster that follows is predictable.” Not so much, it turns out.
So while we still have a deeply troubled economy, one piece of good news is that Americans are, once again, starting to actually make things. And we’re doing that thanks, in large part, to the fact that the Fed and the Obama administration ignored very bad advice from right-wingers — ideologues who still, in the face of all the evidence, claim to know something about creating prosperity.
roblorinov
May 20, 2011
I like comment 33 which said:
“It’s Jobs–that put the dollars in pockets. No jobs– no money– no economy.
Now that we got that out of the way the focus must be on the policy choices which will create American jobs without stealing the value of the dollars which Americans have saved or are earning. Devaluing the dollar is a double edged sword leading to corporate exports while lowering the living standard in the US. Our economy must be rebuilt by rewarding manufacturing in America without punishing American workers.”
Of course the libs are going to use and SPIN the economy anyway they can to get this man reelected so he can have 4 more years to rip apart our nation. I could not help but notice the writer of the article mentioned nothing about job and home losses, nor soaring food prices, nor gas prices. All he does is attempt to glorify the Obamanation as I expected he would do before I even read the article.
As for the Russian emigre I disagree. I’ve seen Americans make plenty of things and they still do! Send him back to Russia and let Putin have his way with him LOL.
samhenry
May 20, 2011
Love it, Lorinov. You and Morb have this down. I wanted you to have this as a preamble to the fight ahead.
samhenry
May 20, 2011
And, RL, I am tired of economists saying jobs lost will not come this way again. So we start new companies, period.
roblorinov
May 21, 2011
Exactly! Americans have always thought of new ways to start new business. Why not now?
roblorinov
May 21, 2011
Thanks to you my dear samhenry
Am ready! Have manned the canons and the ship is ready to defend the Tsar!….oh wait…sorry…had a flashback briefly lol. I mean AM READY for good fight to defend liberty and our Republic against Barry’s tyranny and Communism and knock out his lackey drones one by one. In fact have already started over on my blog. Steve, Jacob, and Gracey the old hippie with all of her Universal Will crap are being racked over the coals as we speak! My battle cry?
“Just say NO to BO in 2012!”
samhenry
May 21, 2011
This is such good news and very exciting, my dear Lorinov. I love “Just say NO to BO in 2012″ and I would place the copyright sign after it and a note about permission to use it.
The Morb
May 20, 2011
Yeah right Paul !!! … And what’s the USA’s national debt again ?! …
I would have let those companies go down the tubes as they rightfully should have !!! … The employees are WAAAAAY overpaid … The product is CRAP !!! … And the executives greased their palms every chance they could ! …
Obama saved the day ?!!! … That’s why China OWNS the States !!! …
Do you agree with this Sam ?! …
Great when ya print money !!! …
That particular Russian isn’t wearing the same rose colored glasses you are …
The American pomposity will be it’s ultimate undoing …
samhenry
May 20, 2011
I don’t believe the article is true at all, My Morb. Not at all. Made me mad. Wanted input to see if I were still sane.
Bob Mack
May 21, 2011
Krugman is a pointy-headed Keynesian leftie who hasn’t been right about anything in his professional career. He’s the guy who almost single-handedly made the Nobel Prize for Economics an irrelevancy. Self described as “an unabashed defender of the welfare state, which I regard as the most decent social arrangement yet devised.” Enough said.
roblorinov
May 21, 2011
Thanks Bob!! I knew this guy sound familiar to me! You jog my memory and YES this is the leftist crackpot economist who has never been right and who spends his days defending the welfare state. He’s another America hater just like Obama! Thank you Bob!
blackwatertown
May 23, 2011
I’ve usually enjoyed reading Krugman over the years – so I’m a dissenting voice here – though he doesn’t seem to feel he’s on such firm ground in the piece above.