From SCDigest's On-Target E-Magazine
- Nov. 25, 2014 -
Supply Chain News: Amid Some Resurgence in US Manufacturing, Factory Floor Wages Continue to Fall
New Report Summarizes Scary Drop in US Manufacturing Wages over the Past Decade; What Good will US Manufacturing Resurgence be at These Wage Levels?
SCDigest Editorial Staff
A new report from the National Employment Law Project, a labor advocacy group, offers a rather dismal of the state of manufacturing wages in the US.
As we have often said, while there are many anecdotes about companies reshoring production back to the US or deciding to keep it in the US rather than go offshore, actual data at best modestly support that thesis.
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The report also notes that heavy reliance on temporary workers hides even bigger declines in manufacturing wages. |
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What Do You Say?
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The report says that the US "manufacturing sector has been resurging in the last few years, growing by 4.3% between 2010 and 2012." Some may argue that while 4.3% annual growth is OK, it is hardly surging. SCDigest notes that in July, US manufacturing output in total finally reached the peak and baseline year of 2007's production levels, and has stayed there ever since, with October output at an index level of 100.6, six-tenths of a percent over 2007 levels some seven long years later.
Regardless, the report says that "the jobs that are returning are not the ones that were lost: wages are lower, the jobs are increasingly temporary, and the promised benefits have yet to be realized."
And the report provides a lot of evidence to back up that claim.
Ironically, in fact, one of the reasons for the renewed interest in US manufacturing is that wages here have either stayed flat or declined, as the report believes, while wages in China continue to grow rapidly, eroding its cost advantage.
The report does a good job of combining both macro-economic data, usually from government sources, with personal anecdotes.
As an example of the latter, it retells the story of one Phillip Hicks, first published in the Wasington Post. Hicks said his only option for a job at a Toyota plant in Georgetown, Kentucky was through the staffing agency Manpower, Inc. Manpower assured Hicks that he would be able to switch to Toyota payroll after a year or two, promising a doubling of his salary from $12.60 to $24.20 an hour and gaining benefits.
But after four years, Hicks was still waiting for a permanent employee position, unable to afford health benefits for his family or take more than three days off per year without risking his job, because of a punitive leave policy that only applied to "temps."
The report says that low wages are now common o the automotive assembly and parts sectors, business that used to pay high wages and moved millions of workers to the middle class.
The chart below from the report shows the changes in wages from 2003 to 2013 across different slices of the total wage spectrum. There were declines in wages over that period in all slices of workers, with the top 10% seeing average wages decline from $29.38 per hour to $27.17, a decrease of 6.1%. Other groups show similar declines.

And these declines are in absolute wages - the hit to workers' incomes is even larger when inflation over the period is factored in.
(Manufacturing Article Continued Below)
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