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Xinhua Commentary: US Struggles in Rebuilding Its Manufacturing Industry

Xinhua News Agency published a commentary on the U.S.’ failing to integrate global warming efforts in bringing manufacture businesses back to China.

Recently, Boeing announced plans to cut approximately 17,000 jobs globally, which stands in stark contrast to the high demand for global aviation manufacturing. This incident reflects several issues within American manufacturing: high labor costs, a shortage of skilled technical workers, and supply chain disruptions.

Since the 1960s, the offshoring of U.S. manufacturing has sparked widespread discussion about America’s “deindustrialization.” To address this problem, following the 2008 global financial crisis, various policies were introduced to revitalize the manufacturing industry, from Obama’s “reindustrialization” to Trump’s “America First” and now Biden’s “supply chain resilience” policy.

During this process, the U.S. has pursued protectionist trade policies and “long-arm jurisdiction” measures to forcibly bring manufacturing back. These actions have led to rising production costs, pressure on fiscal expenditure, high inflation, and damage to the supply chain, resulting in further decline of already hollowed-out industries.

According to a recent survey by the Financial Times, over two years into the Biden administration’s ambitious plan to reshore manufacturing, many projects, particularly in the clean technology and semiconductor sectors, are struggling to get off the ground.

Source: Xinhua, October 17, 2024
http://www.xinhuanet.com/20241017/b99368fad2d74d4b856b4e647b3bbaff/c.html