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Factory Construction

Discussion in 'Too Hot for Swamp Gas' started by G8trGr8t, Jun 11, 2023.

  1. G8trGr8t

    G8trGr8t Premium Member

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    is booming in the US as the stimulus money in the CHIPS act is being allocated to bring manufacturing back home from China. The numbers are impressive.

    Thanks Joe

    The U.S. is building factories at a wildly fast rate (msn.com)

    According to data from the Census Bureau released last week, construction spending by U.S. manufacturers more than doubled over the past year. For April 2023, the annual rate reached nearly $190 billion compared with $90 billion in June 2022, with manufacturing accounting for around 13% of non-government construction. The US government has offered billions of dollars in subsidies for the production of electric vehicles and solar panels to compete with countries such as China and to fortify US leadership in sectors including clean energy. According to the World Bank, China makes up around 30% of global value added from manufacturing, about double the U.S. Over the last few decades, Asia has taken up a greater share of global factory manufacturing.

    Factories are being constructed everywhere from deserts to resort towns as the U.S. tries to bring back manufacturing of goods commonly imported from lower-cost countries. Many battery and electric vehicle factories have popped up in the Rust Belt, while solar panel and renewable energy factories now span much of the South and Southeast.

    The U.S. has added around 800,000 jobs in manufacturing employment over the past two years, employing around 13 million workers per the May Bureau of Labor Statistics jobs report. However, according to the National Association of Manufacturers, the manufacturing skills gap — caused by the labor market's struggle to find workers with highly technical and manual expertise — could lead to 2.1 million unfilled jobs by 2030.

    Manufacturing, though, has accelerated its move back to the US from other countries over the past year. According to Kearney's 2022 Reshoring Index, 96% of American companies have shifted production to the US or are evaluating reshoring operations — a spike from 78% in the 2021 index. The sudden rise in factory construction corresponds with passage of the CHIPS and Science Act in July 2022, which provided $280 billion in funding to boost manufacturing of semiconductors, as well as the Inflation Reduction Act in August 2022. The IRA has sought to create new jobs in manufacturing, construction, and renewable energy, estimated to create up to 1.5 million jobs by 2030.
     
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  2. l_boy

    l_boy 5500

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    This is the way government intervention is supposed to work.
     
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  3. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    Both parties have failed at this in the past. Why is there more success this time?
     
  4. BLING

    BLING GC Hall of Fame

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    [​IMG]
     
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  5. WC53

    WC53 GC Hall of Fame

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    I would imagine the global supply chain woes and lean “on demand” manufacturing of parts has an affect. People started noticing the weak link and doing the math that saving a few cents on the part was now costing them dollars. And tax breaks. Ymmv
     
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  6. danmanne65

    danmanne65 GC Hall of Fame

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    I imagine providing incentive is better than funding infrastructure long term but both are important.
     
  7. jjgator55

    jjgator55 VIP Member

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    The Chinese government only has itself to blame. At one time when they were trying to be a democracy they were pretty reliable partners, but then Xi Jinping decided to get all Trumpy being an authoritarian. Now China is losing ground around the world just like the United States was under republican leadership.
     
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  8. BLING

    BLING GC Hall of Fame

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    Pretty much.

    Xi decided to go “ultra nationalist” and shot him self in the foot by failing in their COVID policy (in their case, by going too hard and too long on “zero tolerance” and following that up with poor vaccines, which drove them to double down on “zero tolerance”). The result was China as a choke point in the global recovery, and a cause of global inflation.

    Even without the ultra nationalist crap, it alerted the world that supply chains needed more diversification, if not more onshoring. At least on strategic or critical items.
     
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  9. savanahsantiago

    savanahsantiago Recruit

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    It's great to see the manufacturing sector in the US booming again! The CHIPS act and the funding from the Science Act seem to be making a real impact, bringing back factories from overseas. Thanks, Joe, for sharing this fantastic news!