Tuesday, October 8, 2019

Restoring Manufacturing Gradually

The gaps in our product development cycles have always sabotaged and stalled the sustainability of our economy. Development needs to be on-going to give Engineers the time to keep improving products and processes. When there are no new development projects on deck, many engineers leave. When revenue drops, everybody gets laid off. Preserving cash becomes the company’s only hope for survival.  I used to think that Boeing was the sound that Boeing made as its headcount bounced…boing..boing..

I have always watched Engineer layoffs. Boeing grew in the 1960s, but lower orders in 1969 and 1971 resulted in massive layoffs of engineers and production employees.  Boeing headcount dropped
1968 100,000
1969 80,000
1971 32.500
1998 104,800
2004   52,763
2008   76,000

In the 1960s, US consumers bought US durable goods like cars, refrigerators, appliances, furniture, TVs and everything else.  US consumers also bought clothes, shoes, household goods, soap, beverages and everything else.

US manufacturing companies were establishing plants in other countries to supply US products to their local markets. US Labor Unions were demanding more pay and benefits and obstructing improvements in processes and products. Corporate Tax was 50% and Individual Income Taxes were 70%. Corporate profits were 5%.

In the 1970s, the US began to lose its basic industries like steel and durable goods manufacturing.  Foreign countries offered lower taxes, lower labor costs and fewer regulations in exchange for giving jobs to their local citizens in our manufacturing plants.  

US consumers began to buy fuel efficient, better made foreign cars. US appliance brands began to disappear. Foreign-made clothing and shoes were well-made and cheaper. US high taxes, increasing regulations and labor costs were driving US manufacturing to foreign countries.

By the 1980s the US had worked through many technical issues to allow for a re-tooling in electronics that created a boom. Electronics advanced to create the PC, Programmable Controllers,   

In the 1990’s the US announced that we were entering the “Information Age” that was a lame excuse for killing off the middle class. 

By 2008, the US finished off-shoring almost all of its manufacturing and had already regulated the US economy to extinction. The 2008 meltdown heralded the end of the US middle class.  We had minimum wage jobs and had 60,000 welfare immigrants. Federal spending doubled from $2 trillion to $4 trillion. The Federal National Debt quadrupled from $5 trillion to $20 trillion.

In 2017, we began the slow claim back to prosperity, but most of our experienced engineers and production employees were retired or working in other industries. We have been without these folks for 20 years and many have retired.  Our recent grads have been trained to be “social justice” advocates and few have the employable skills in product design engineering we need to restart our manufacturing industries. We should be able to fill production jobs as we did in the electronics boom of the 1980s. We need foreign engineers with experience in designing durable goods, especially electronics.

Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader 

No comments:

Post a Comment