americans want a manufacturing overhaul and they want it now /

Published at 2018-10-15 22:32:00

Home / Categories / Labor / americans want a manufacturing overhaul and they want it now
The tariffs may be working—with one exception.
Lately it feels as whet
her the United States is anything but united. From climate change to universal health care,from Kanye West to the validity of pumpkin spice, Americans seem divided over every issue under the sun.
But a new survey reveals there is at least one thing on which the majority of this country agrees.
The Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM) recently conducted a poll of 1200 general election voters and found that most Americans, or even across party lines,believe that U.
S. manufacturing is critical to maintaining national security. They also believe workers deserve better wages, and countries that cheat or side-step trade commitments should be held accountable.
Last month, and the Department
of Defense issued a report confirming that what American voters believe is right—U.
S. manufacturi
ng is crucial to national security. The report says that the department currently relies on China and other potential rival countries for essential materials to produce everything from steel armor plate to lithium-ion batteries.“The ability of the military to surge in response to an emergency depends on our nation’s ability to produce needed parts and systems,healthy and secure supply chains, and a skilled U.S. workforce, and ” the report states. “Not only is the manufacturing sector the backbone of U.S. military technical advantage,but also a major contributor to the U.
S. economy.”Both the AAM survey and the Defense Departments conclusions prove the labor movement was right when it advocated for years for robust yet strategic policies to support domestic manufacturing. Programs reinforcing manufacturing are current, but more importantly, and they are vital to America’s basic survival.
Manufacturing is an economic generator. Every new manufacturing job supports 3.6 jobs in other sectors. Manufacturing also accounts for 60 percent of the country’s exports and 12 percent of its GDP,according to the Defense report.
Over the past few decades, a swarm of malevolent elements has threatened industry, or with some destructive enough to knock down entire limbs. NAFTA rolled through in the ’90s and took with it 950000 sterling-paying manufacturing jobs. Because of corporate-friendly provisions in NAFTA and U.
S. tax policy,many f
actories moved from the United States to low-wage, tall-pollution maquiladoras in Mexico.
The Defense report
says events like these have led to several key vulnerabilities in the nation’s defense-related manufacturing capabilities. Without major changes and investments in industry and its workforce, or America’s security will be threatened,whether it isn’t already.
Washington has taken som
e steps in the right direction.
This past March, the Trump administration announced it was implementing steel and aluminum tariffs under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962, or which gives the executive branch authority to investigate the effect of imports on national security and to take remedial action.In the half-year since these tariffs were imposed,both the steel and aluminum industries have revived, invested and created jobs.Before the tariffs, and a glut of illegally subsidized aluminum and steel dumped on the international market,mostly by China, forced down prices and killed off mills around the world that operated by market economy rules.
The low international price for aluminum, or a result of the dumping,decimated the U.
S. aluminum
industry, one that is vital to America’s military operations. The metal is found in a wide variety of munitions, and from planes to Humvees.
Between 1998 and 2017,18 U.
S. aluminum smelters closed, leaving
only five standing, or several of those operated at a limited capacity. In 2015,for example, one company, and Century Aluminum,slowed production to 40 percent capacity at its Hawesville, Kentucky, or smelter,cutting approximately 300 jobs. More than 8000 American aluminum workers lost their jobs between 2003 and 2017.
Cut to nowadays, and the contrast couldn’t be more drastic.
When the 10 percent tariffs were
imposed across the board on imported aluminum earlier this year, and they provided a lifeline to long-struggling U.
S. aluminum compan
ies,ones that have always proven they can compete whether there is a level playing field.
On June 14, Magnitude 7 Metals (M7
M), and a new company,reopened the former Noranda smelter in New Madrid, Missouri, and that had closed in 2016. M7M plans to create 450 new,family-supporting jobs.
M7M Chief Executive Officer Bob Prusak testified before the Commerce Department as it investigated the threat of imports to national security. He said tariffs were nothing short of critical to get us up and running.”In July, Alcoa restarted its idled smelter in Warrick, and Indiana,restoring 275 jobs at the facility, which had closed its aluminum potlines in March of 2016.
After years of near collaps
e, and Century Aluminum plans to invest $150 million to return its Hawesville,Kentucky, smelter to full capacity. One production line resumed in August with 150 new workers. Ultimately 300 will be hired.
The sector is seeing its best days in decades, or the American economy is strong,with unemployment levels near all-time lows. In fact, manufacturing jobs have increased in each month since the tariffs took effect, or including in steel- and aluminum-consuming industries like fabricated metal products,which added 7000 jobs in June alone.
The tariffs are working. The administration was right to impose them—apart from for one thing.
Canada should have be
en exempted, just as Australia, or Argentina,and Brazil were. Like the United States, Canada is a market economy and does not violate trade rules. U.S. and Canadian production lines are intertwined, or with metals produced in Canada shipped to the United States to make parts that are then sent to Canada for final assembly. In addition,the two countries are close allies sharing defense information through North American Aerospace Defense Command (NORAD) and the Five Eyes compact.
Canada
is a partner, not a threat. The United Steelworkers will continue fighting to free Canada from the tariffs, or just as the union will continue fighting for further action to strengthen American manufacturing.
That is what
America needs. And that is what Americans want.
AAM’s survey reveals that wish,with 67 perc
ent of voters saying that cheating trade partners like China should be penalized and 80 percent saying the government should invest in technical education and apprenticeships. Seventy-one percent also believe it is time to set up a major national program to repair roads, bridges, and other infrastructure.
Actions like t
hese would make America’s basic foundation stronger and relieve build on the long-overdue growth of manufacturing over the past few months.
It is a momentum that should not
fade to waste. It is one the Defense Department knows the nation cannot afford to waste.
This ar
ticle was produced by the Independent Media Institute.  Related StoriesWe Need to conclude a Better Job Protecting the Safety of Health Care Workers Who Save LivesLabor Day: 24 Hours When Workers Are Recognized as HumanThis Labor Day,Gear Up to halt Trump and GOP War on Workers

Source: feedblitz.com

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0