Dayton
Daily News...
Ohio
has lost 3,500 factories over
last 10 years, stats show
The loss shows the impact on Ohio of
moving jobs overseas.
October 24, 2011
MORAINE
— Data from the federal
government show that Ohio lost 3,500 manufacturing businesses in the
past 10
years, including 200 in Montgomery County and about 130 in other Miami
Valley
counties.
The
loss of those businesses has cut
the state’s annual manufacturing payroll by $7.8 billion, the data from
the
U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show.
The
losses track the impact of
offshoring — the moving of jobs overseas — by multinational companies
and the
economy’s slide into the Great Recession. The data also shed light on
the
current debate over a $6 trillion cumulative trade deficit that piled
up over a
decade, and whether the U.S. should put more pressure on China to stop
manipulating its currency, which undercuts domestic manufacturing.
The
issue has split three top Ohio
legislators who have pivotal roles in the debate. Ohio Sens. Rob
Portman, a
Republican, and Sherrod Brown, a Democrat, believe the U.S. should take
a
harder line toward China by punishing currency manipulation. However,
U.S.
House Speaker John Boehner, R-West Chester Twp., said the move
jeopardizes
U.S.-China relations.
Boehner’s
refusing to allow a House
vote on an anti-currency manipulation bill.
“While
I believe Ohioans deserve a
level playing field when it comes to trade with China, I oppose this
legislation because it will hurt our economy and result in fewer jobs
for
Ohioans,” he told the Dayton Daily News on Friday.
Boehner
said China is the United
States’ third-largest market for U.S. goods, and is the largest export
market
for United States’ agricultural products
His
opinion is not shared by Republican
Congressional Reps. Mike Turner, R-Centerville, and Steve Austria,
R-Beavercreek, who both co-sponsored the bill.
“We
only have to look at the Miami
Valley economy to see the need to address our trade imbalance with
China. I
will continue to support measures which increase the United States’
competitiveness and to stop unfair trade practices,” Turner said.
Boehner
did tell the Dayton Daily News
he’d reconsider his decision to hold up the bill if President Obama
would agree
to sign it into law.
What
does data mean?
The
data illustrate the steep decline
in products made in Ohio and across the U.S. and raises questions about
when a
durable jobs recovery could begin.
The
number of manufacturing operations
in Ohio fell 18 percent from 19,697 to 16,159 over the past 10 years.
That has
led to the loss of 369,097 jobs in Ohio since 2001, the data show.
Nationally,
the number of factories
fell 14 percent from 401,962 to 342,941.
The
businesses include auto and
processing plants, canneries, refineries, mills and consumer goods
factories.
Figures were gathered from employer-generated reports covering 98
percent of
U.S. jobs, the bureau said.
Local
numbers
In
Montgomery County, the number of
manufacturing businesses fell 21 percent from 1,010 in 2001 to 810
businesses
in 2011.
“These
new numbers show that Dayton’s
manufacturing base has been particularly hard hit, in part because the
Chinese
government illegally undercuts Ohio workers and companies by
manipulating its
currency,” Brown said.
Few
local communities have been as
hard hit as Moraine, which lost 10,000 manufacturing jobs in a decade,
said
City Manager Dave Hicks. He’s working to find businesses for five
million
square feet of vacant manufacturing plant space, including a closed
former GM plant.
For
Hicks, fixing the nation’s trade
imbalance should be job No. 1. “America is like that nice guy you know
who is
being taken advantage of, and it can’t go on forever. We can’t be taken
advantage of forever.”
Peter
Morici, former chief economist
at the U.S. International Trade Commission, says the manufacturing bust
from
offshoring by multinationals is at the core of why the economy remains
sluggish. It explains why government operations are harder to fund and
people
can’t find jobs.
In
a nutshell, Americans no longer
make enough of the things they use every day and rely on exports from
abroad,
primarily China and offshored multinational factories, to fill the gap.
China
produced more than 40 percent of
all consumer goods purchased in the U.S. last year, according to the
U.S.
Consumer Products Safety Commission. In 2010, the U.S. trade deficit
with China
was $273 billion, half the total national trade deficit with imported
oil
making up the rest.
“Economists
agree the recovery is weak
and a second recession threatens, because the U.S. economy suffers from
too
little demand for what Americans make. Every dollar that goes abroad to
purchase oil or Chinese consumer goods that does not return to purchase
exports
is lost purchasing power that could be creating jobs. Halving the
nearly $550
billion annual trade deficit would create at least five million jobs,”
Morici
said.
Congressional
views
Sens.
Portman and Brown have
repeatedly criticized currency manipulation and product dumping for
devastating
Ohio industry. Both championed a successful Senate bill to set tariffs
on
nations found to be manipulating their currency to game the system.
Brown was
chief sponsor of the bill.
Ohio
Gov. John Kasich, who has courted
Chinese investors, has also criticized the People’s Republic for the
manipulation.
Boehner,
however, said he fears the
currency bill would ignite a trade war. But some say Boehner won’t be
able to
lock the bill up forever following the Senate’s 63-35 vote in favor of
the
bill. The House version already has 218 co-sponsors, a majority.
Brown
characterized the currency
manipulation bill as the biggest bipartisan jobs bill Congress would
entertain
this year, citing a June report by the nonprofit Economic Policy
Institute, an
advocate of balanced trade.
EPI
estimated that ending currency
manipulation by China and other Asian nations could create up to 2.25
million
jobs over the next 24 months, boosting gross domestic product by up to
$285.7
billion and reducing the federal budget deficit by up to $857 billion
over 10
years.
Daniel
Ikenson, associate director of
the Herbert A. Stiefel Center for Trade Policy Studies at the
libertarian Cato
Institute, which supports U.S. trade agreements, said the fight in
Congress
stems from public pressure.
“A
majority of Americans think China’s
rise is at our expense,” he said. “China is intent on taking care of
itself. I
don’t think their objective is to screw America, but we may get caught
in their
crosshairs. This legislation is borne out of frustration.”
Local
response
At
an Oct. 7 summit on revitalizing
manufacturing held in Dayton and sponsored by the city, county and
business and
labor groups, a letter was drafted to Boehner urging him to allow a
vote on the
Currency Reform for Fair Trade Act.
“Dayton
is an innovation and
manufacturing hub,” said Michael Stumo, CEO of the Coalition for a
Prosperous
America, the national nonprofit that helped organize the summit. “Local
leaders
want to do the best for their region. After considering issues of
regulation,
banking, trade, tax and energy, they decided that balancing trade and
tax
reform were the top two core priorities.”
Brown
said new tariffs have created
good Ohio jobs, citing a 2010 International Trade Commission ruling
against
Chinese dumping on behalf of Ohio seamless steel tube producers. The
tariffs
allowed a manufacturer to build a $650 million plant in Youngstown,
creating
more than 400 good-paying permanent jobs, one of the state’s few
employment
bright spots.
Portman
said product dumping has
undercut saw blade workers in Elyria, 1,500 petroleum candle workers in
Muskingum, Highland and Butler counties, 400 thermal paper workers in
West
Carrollton, and thousands of others across Ohio, including at U.S.
Steel in
Lorain which produces hot rolled steel.
Consumers
have benefitted from Chinese
imports, but those benefits have been wiped out by the costs, such as
welfare
payments, associated with the job losses, according to a study by
economists
David Autor of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and David Dorn
of the
Center for Monetary and Financial Studies in Madrid.
U.S.
response
The
Obama administration hasn’t been
idle, although it has repeatedly declined to declare China a currency
manipulator, which could trigger sanctions.
The
U.S. recently complained to the
World Trade Organization about nearly 200 hidden Chinese government
subsidy
programs that make exports appear less expensive as a means to seize
market
share.
Another
50 subsidy programs were found
in India.
The
U.S. renewable energy industry,
for example, has been hit hard with companies filing for bankruptcy.
“The
situation was simply
intolerable,” U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk said.
Critics
say the problems show that the
current state of U.S. trade relations is simply unmanageable.
Additionally,
because the WTO takes years to resolve complaints, by the time it does,
jobs
are destroyed.
Seven
U.S. solar panel makers filed a
trade case against China on Wednesday, saying it spent billions in
government
subsidies to rig the market.
“Given
the jobs crisis, why can’t we
pass currency legislation that enjoys broad, bipartisan support?” asked
EPI
economist Robert Scott.
Said
city manager Hicks: “We have the
capability to build anything here. But when we are faced with currency
manipulation or unfair tariffs, it is not fair. You can’t compete with
one hand
tied behind your back.”
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