Post by unlawflcombatnt on Nov 29, 2008 17:07:10 GMT -6
from AmericanManufacturing.org:
2.3 Million Jobs Lost to China since 2001
by Steven Capozzola
2.3 Million Jobs Lost to China since 2001;
Replacement Jobs Pay Substantially Less, Data Shows
U.S. Advanced Technology Sector Hit Hard by Trade Deficit with China
"The increasing U.S. trade deficit with China has cost 2.3 million American jobs between 2001 and 2007, including 366,000 last year alone, according to a study released today by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). These displaced workers lost an average of $8,146 last year, a total of $19.4 billion, as they moved to lower-paying jobs.
Workers producing exports are not earning as much as those in industries hurt by imports, the EPI study reveals. U.S. exports to China are heavily concentrated in commodities, including scrap products and agricultural goods, while 98% of Chinese imports were manufactured products.[ And 100% of those manufactured imports used to be made in this country, and 100% of those could again be made in this country. ]
Average wages earned producing U.S. exports to China paid 4.4% less than jobs lost to imports from China. Thus, continuing trade deficits with China are shifting jobs from higher-wage manufacturing to low-wage commodities.
“Since China gained entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, the United States has lost millions of good-paying jobs,” said Leo W. Gerard, International President of the United Steelworkers. “This new study shows how trade with China, on their terms, is undermining hard-working American families’ earnings. This is an unbalanced trade relationship that must be changed, and Congress should act now.”
“Our flawed trade relationship with China is destroying good jobs throughout the U.S. manufacturing sector,” said Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM). “What may surprise people in these numbers, however, is how much workers in advanced technology are being affected. As China diversifies its export base – and it’s already expanding into electronic products, aircraft, auto parts and machinery – more American products will be unfairly disadvantaged.”
Rapidly growing imports of computers and electronic parts accounted for nearly half of the $178 billion increase in the trade deficit with China between 2001 and 2007. More than ¼ of last year’s trade deficit, $68 billion, was due to advanced technology products, nearly 6 times the deficit in 2002. In contrast, the United States has a $15 billion trade surplus with the rest of the world in advanced technology products.
More than ½ (55.6%) of the jobs displaced by trade with China were in the top half of American wage earners. Nearly 1/3 (31%) of the jobs lost were among workers with a college degree. A dramatic example is the loss of 200,000 scientists and engineers within the manufacturing sector, a 10.7% drop. [ And yet economic propagandists like Bill Gates keep regurgitating the lie about a "lack of trained" workers for high tech/high skill jobs ]
Competition from low-wage countries like China affects 80% of the U.S. private-sector workforce—roughly 100 million workers. [That's a huge fraction of our employed workers. There are only 145 million employed in this country, which means this affects over 2/3 of them ]The study estimates that, in 2006 alone, low-wage competitive pressures reduced the annual wages of these workers by an average of $1,400 each....
“The major causes of the skyrocketing trade deficit with China are no mystery,” said Tom Conway, United Steelworkers International Vice President. “China’s manipulation of its currency makes the yuan artificially cheap, effectively subsidizing exports. Beijing’s suppression of labor rights also lowers wages. China subsidizes key industries while maintaining barriers to some imports.”
AAM has urged Congress and the Bush administration to ensure that China honor its trade commitments and dramatically revalue its currency, eliminate questionable subsidies to industry, and enforce labor and environmental laws.
“We can strengthen jobs and manufacturing in America, but only if we first take steps to stop China’s cheating,” said Terry Straub, Vice President of Public Affairs and Government for U.S. Steel. “Until we address distortions of the free market, such as dumping, subsidies and illegal currency manipulation, we’ll continue to see a hollowing out of our high-tech productive capacity, as well as the very good jobs that go with it,” he said...."
www.americanmanufacturing.org/newscenter/pressreleases/2008/07/30/23-million-jobs-lost-to-china-since-2001/
--------------
A 2-page summary of the report can be found at
www.americanmanufacturing.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/jobschina-fact-sheet.pdf
The full 24-page report can be found at:
www.americanmanufacturing.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/briefingpaper219_finalreally.pdf
2.3 Million Jobs Lost to China since 2001
by Steven Capozzola
2.3 Million Jobs Lost to China since 2001;
Replacement Jobs Pay Substantially Less, Data Shows
U.S. Advanced Technology Sector Hit Hard by Trade Deficit with China
"The increasing U.S. trade deficit with China has cost 2.3 million American jobs between 2001 and 2007, including 366,000 last year alone, according to a study released today by the Economic Policy Institute (EPI). These displaced workers lost an average of $8,146 last year, a total of $19.4 billion, as they moved to lower-paying jobs.
Workers producing exports are not earning as much as those in industries hurt by imports, the EPI study reveals. U.S. exports to China are heavily concentrated in commodities, including scrap products and agricultural goods, while 98% of Chinese imports were manufactured products.[ And 100% of those manufactured imports used to be made in this country, and 100% of those could again be made in this country. ]
Average wages earned producing U.S. exports to China paid 4.4% less than jobs lost to imports from China. Thus, continuing trade deficits with China are shifting jobs from higher-wage manufacturing to low-wage commodities.
“Since China gained entry into the World Trade Organization in 2001, the United States has lost millions of good-paying jobs,” said Leo W. Gerard, International President of the United Steelworkers. “This new study shows how trade with China, on their terms, is undermining hard-working American families’ earnings. This is an unbalanced trade relationship that must be changed, and Congress should act now.”
“Our flawed trade relationship with China is destroying good jobs throughout the U.S. manufacturing sector,” said Scott Paul, executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing (AAM). “What may surprise people in these numbers, however, is how much workers in advanced technology are being affected. As China diversifies its export base – and it’s already expanding into electronic products, aircraft, auto parts and machinery – more American products will be unfairly disadvantaged.”
Rapidly growing imports of computers and electronic parts accounted for nearly half of the $178 billion increase in the trade deficit with China between 2001 and 2007. More than ¼ of last year’s trade deficit, $68 billion, was due to advanced technology products, nearly 6 times the deficit in 2002. In contrast, the United States has a $15 billion trade surplus with the rest of the world in advanced technology products.
More than ½ (55.6%) of the jobs displaced by trade with China were in the top half of American wage earners. Nearly 1/3 (31%) of the jobs lost were among workers with a college degree. A dramatic example is the loss of 200,000 scientists and engineers within the manufacturing sector, a 10.7% drop. [ And yet economic propagandists like Bill Gates keep regurgitating the lie about a "lack of trained" workers for high tech/high skill jobs ]
Competition from low-wage countries like China affects 80% of the U.S. private-sector workforce—roughly 100 million workers. [That's a huge fraction of our employed workers. There are only 145 million employed in this country, which means this affects over 2/3 of them ]The study estimates that, in 2006 alone, low-wage competitive pressures reduced the annual wages of these workers by an average of $1,400 each....
“The major causes of the skyrocketing trade deficit with China are no mystery,” said Tom Conway, United Steelworkers International Vice President. “China’s manipulation of its currency makes the yuan artificially cheap, effectively subsidizing exports. Beijing’s suppression of labor rights also lowers wages. China subsidizes key industries while maintaining barriers to some imports.”
AAM has urged Congress and the Bush administration to ensure that China honor its trade commitments and dramatically revalue its currency, eliminate questionable subsidies to industry, and enforce labor and environmental laws.
“We can strengthen jobs and manufacturing in America, but only if we first take steps to stop China’s cheating,” said Terry Straub, Vice President of Public Affairs and Government for U.S. Steel. “Until we address distortions of the free market, such as dumping, subsidies and illegal currency manipulation, we’ll continue to see a hollowing out of our high-tech productive capacity, as well as the very good jobs that go with it,” he said...."
www.americanmanufacturing.org/newscenter/pressreleases/2008/07/30/23-million-jobs-lost-to-china-since-2001/
--------------
A 2-page summary of the report can be found at
www.americanmanufacturing.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/jobschina-fact-sheet.pdf
The full 24-page report can be found at:
www.americanmanufacturing.org/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/07/briefingpaper219_finalreally.pdf