February 16, 2010 10:40 PM

Putting Americans Back to Work

By
John Blackstone
(CBS)  In its "Where America Stands" series, CBS News is looking at a broad spectrum of issues facing this country in the new decade.

For many high school students thinking of a promising career this would be a field trip to avoid. A visit on a cold day to a noisy, drafty building to watch steelworkers cut, drill and weld.

But the kids from Benson Polytechnic High Schoolin Portland, Oregon are getting a sales pitch from Drew Park, the president of CBS News correspondent John Blackstone reports by the time the tour is over, some of the students are seeing their future."It's amazing, the skill they have to make sure that the weld is just right," said Jeff Walberg, a student. Another student Corey Elliott added: "I like working with tools. I like working with my hands. It makes me feel nice and fuzzy inside."But is there a future working with your hands in America, or is that in the past? Tell Us What You Think Send us an e-mail.Our report card shows that in the 21st century, America has largely stopped making things. In the year 2000, more than 17 million Americans were employed in manufacturing. By last year, that had dropped to fewer than 12 million. Bureau of Labor StatisticsThe same steep loss is seen across most industries. In 2000, more than 1.3 million Americans built automobiles. In 2009, fewer than 674,000 were left in an industry that has continued shrinking.Ten years ago nearly 700,000 Americans were employed making furniture. By 2009 that had dropped to 390,000. In the same period the number of Americans making clothing has dropped by almost two thirds, from 483,500 to 168,300. Those making shoes and other leather products is down by more than half - from 68,800 to 30,900. And it's not just old line work. Even jobs making computers have been disappearing - down from nearly 2 million jobs ten years ago to just over a million in 2009.The Problem The problem is that those disappearing jobs are going to countries where workers are paid far less. In China, where health and safety rules are few and millions are looking for work, the average manufacturing worker earns just $134 each month - compared to almost $2,400 a month in the United States. WorldSalaries.org But the problem is more than just the loss of manufacturing jobs to low wage countries. Steelworker Brandon Nelson, says we have lost respect for the kind of work that once provided prosperity. "It seems like nobody wants to do this work," Nelson said. "They want to be in an office, or work in front of a computer instead of building things."Some argue that it doesn't matter whether the factory floor is here in the United States or somewhere overseas. If Americans are being paid for doing the designing, engineering and marketing, where a product is actually made - is of little consequence. CBS Reports: Where America StandsTake the huge success of Apple's iPod -- 250 million of them have been made in Chinese factories. But the design and the programming are done in America which takes the biggest share of the profit.

Those high value jobs however could be the next to go to places like China and Taiwan says Harley Shaiken, a labor expert at the University of California Berkeley.

"The countries where manufacturing is taking place by leaps and bounds today have their eye on that research and development," Shaiken said. "That's what they're going for."

Just look at what's happened to cell phones. An American company, Motorola, developed the first portable cell phone the DynaTAC 8000Xin 1983.

In 2009, nearly 1.2 Billion cell phones were sold around the world -- but not one was manufactured in the United States. Last year Motorola held just 3.6% of the world cell phone market.

The Solution

The solution begins by questioning the conventional wisdom that America can thrive without manufacturing.

"That idea is just flat wrong," said Jeffrey Immelt,Chairman of General Electric Company.

Immelt announced plans for a $100 million research center in Michigan creating 1,200 jobs. While General Electric has moved tens of thousands of manufacturing jobs overseas in recent years, Immelt says it's time for American companies to rethink outsourcing.

"That's is just not sustainable," Immelt said. "It's not a business strategy."

To overcome the cost differences with low wage countries American businesses can be competitive by investing in technology, training and new manufacturing methods to raise productivity.

"Labor costs are very important in any manufacturing economy," Shaiken said. "But what's critical is labor costs combined with innovation, high productivity, and quality."

Drew Park credits exactly that: innovation, productivity and quality for keeping his business - producing custom steel products - competitive internationally. And allowing him to pay his workers up to $60,000 a year. But to stay competitive he needs more skilled workers.

"Our workforce is aging and we're having a hard time getting the younger generation involved," Park said.

Portland Workforce Alliance

Park works with Portland's Benson High to encourage kids who like making things. At Benson, one of the rare schools that still runs a big shop program, teacher Tim Hryciw says there's no shame in wanting to work with your hands.

"Not everybody can sit in an office and just work behind a computer," Hryciw said. "Doesn't work that way. Not everybody wants to. I surely didn't."

For America to rebuild its greatness in manufacturing perhaps it's time for the whole country to take a lesson from the students at Benson High where they learn that working with your hands, making things, is not only honorable - it's essential.


Where America Stands Links
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Mapping Cancer Genes to Find a Cure
Where America Stands: Terrorism
Alzheimer's Disease, Where America Stands


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Outlook for job market remains grim
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A closer look at the U.S. in the next decade
In America's next decade, change and challenges

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 221 Comments
by atlenta May 30, 2010 11:28 PM EDT
http://www.ireport.com/docs/DOC-436128
Dear Employers Who Care,
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What I don't understand is that our country has monies to spend on wars but cannot support its own people when these people, who were born here, educated here, and paid their dues, who cannot find employment after 99 weeks after feverishly searching for it, find themselves lost or even invisible in the eyes of our elected officials.
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Andrew Stettner is correct that we must not allow these people to fall off the edge.
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I am a 53 year U.S. citizen, white male, who is well educated with a Masters Degree in International Trade, speak 3 foreign languages including Spanish, French, & German, worked as an auditor for 19 years for The Volkswagen Group and as a Trade Show Manager for Gelman Sciences, Inc. in Ann Arbor, Michigan, in addition to being a previous Library of Congress Intern,? and found win-win solutions to very difficult and complex business problems while lowering costs here, in Puerto Rico, and Canada who now join the ranks of those who cannot find employment.
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I paid all of my bills, had excellent credit, traveled the world, and took care of my parents until they passed, but now more than ever need gainful employment.
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Sonny Purdue , President Obama and First Lady Mrs. Michelle. Obama talk about continuing one's education, but what do you do when one completes a higher education and cannot find gainful employment? These numbers from people whose ages range between 28 and 52 years old are growing everyday who have graduated and cannot find employment. What are we going to do as a society when teachers are laid off permanently? 700 plus teachers are just feeling this reality in Cobb County Georgia.
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Some say you have to create your own job.
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I have done my best to even transform myself and have created Advertising Media for? local Marietta & other Georgia businesses at: http://www.atlantaphotographer4hire.com in the hope of being discovered.
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I have received letters from other hard working Americans telling me that this should not happen to me. After all,? I paid my dues so I thought. I paid all of my student loans and did all of those things that others viewed as successful.
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After exhausting all of my 401K monies and life savings to pay my healthcare costs for the past 3 three years I find myself not giving up or in. I am so many things to so many people. I am an Analyst, Auditor, Advertising Media Specialist, Photographer, Spanish Interpreter, and your best friend. I can be the best employee you will ever had. Give me a chance, please.
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Leonard Pasek
1950 Overland Crossing
Alpharetta, GA 30004
Email: leonardpasek@gmail.com
http://www.atlantaphotographer4hire.com
Tel: 770.751.5942
Reply to this comment
by GreenGestalt March 8, 2010 10:23 PM EST
We need to hold Obama to his promise to end tax breaks and subsidies to companies that export jobs. Renew "Tariffs". If a company makes a pair of shoes by having a barefoot girl who's too young to (so far) be sold to a brothel sewing the shoes, fine, but at the very least it should end up costing just as much as a shoe plant in America that pays human wages and obeys our laws would reasonably charge. As much, or slightly more.



That way, if some incredible "Cobbler" gets world wide fame and people scan/measure their feet for custom shoes and pay hundreds per shoe, there's no worry, or if a company makes something we don't make, there's no worry, but there is no "Undercutting".


Furthermore, we should enforce immigration laws. We don't need no fence or profiling, just check the books on low wage jobs and farms and prosecute.


Seriously, what we need to do is go on jury duty and let off criminals to make a protest. Make a protest of the USA not enforcing immigration laws as you let off "Chester M." since he only had "Pictures" on his computer and kept any RL urges to "Overseas tours". He, at least provides someone who'd starve to death otherwise a lot of money and he doesn't steal from you the money to buy bread for your children as the rich elite do. Prosecutors make their living by "Justice by Points". Let off their usual targets in protest, durn straight they'll start checking the books and busting illegal employers. And, since anyone can get fired or laid off for any or no reason, going on Jury Duty is a good protection. If/when it happens, even if the company goes out of business, sue the ex-bosses because they did it to punish you for going on jury duty. Even if you let off "Chester M." for the reasons described and nearly gave the judge a stroke, he'll not throw it out of court, he'll let it go on and on and on. Not that it will, no one believes right or wrong anymore, the companies will toss you and your lawyer some money to save years in court.


Do these, there will be so many jobs to so few workers, the scarcity will force a 50s economic boom...
Reply to this comment
by DustinX July 26, 2010 10:44 AM EDT
It's unfortunate that so many people are sitting in college only to end up empty handed later on in life. Where we are headed with this economy, there is too big of a demand and not enough supply when it comes to high end jobs.

Dustin Lorenz
http://legionsupply.org
by JayAdler1 March 7, 2010 1:06 AM EST
I know parents in the neighborhood whose kids did not want to go to school.Sometimes if the parents are successful an are degreed and because they see signs that there child will never finish their schooling and leave perhaps at the age of 17 to go to work, feel dismal about them not attending college. I did notice the non students became plumbers, electricians, fence builders, mechanics and hard laborers. We must respect everyone for the job they do.Not everybody is a student and someone has to work in labor or else we would not have anyone to do the dirty work.A Liberal Arts Degree sometimes does not reward as much as the guy who paints your living room. Actually a good house painter does very well and no PowerPoint to worry all weekend about.
Reply to this comment
by babooph February 24, 2010 9:55 PM EST
How many noticed the loss of US jobs went on as the rich raked in their tax reduction & became richer-to increase jobs we must tax this bunch like IKE DID!!!
Reply to this comment
by babooph February 23, 2010 9:23 PM EST
The BIG LIE the US propaganda system has screamed about the rich giving jobs,is still swallowed by the deluded few-they have enough stashed from this last 10 year rip off to have the dividends pay off any future tax FOREVER!!!This is hopeless...
Reply to this comment
by magnumdr February 23, 2010 10:17 AM EST
Our President is going to put hundred of thousands more american workers out of work if he gets his way and sues the tobacco industry for 330 billion dollars. This action will also hurt many other companies who send supplies for this company. Is this a good thing to do when we are all fighting for jobs?
Reply to this comment
by amerilatino February 23, 2010 4:25 PM EST
Not nearly as many as the tobacco industry has killed and made permanently ill at incalculable cost to the entire nation, but I guess this is all justifiable to the tobacco industry's CEO's and shareholders.
by ibsteve2u February 23, 2010 8:50 PM EST
Ah, but you see crushing the tobacco companies is what the insurance corporations want...

Anybody suspect a connection between this Administration and the insurance corporations, yet?
by CitizenMikeM February 23, 2010 9:21 AM EST
In my opinion, the best way to put people back to work is at the state level. Instead of using $747 billion to make contractors richer, the Feds should have given each state $15 billion to pay off deficits and get on an even keel budget and allow them to start local jobs programs. Some states who have managed their deficit spending well would prosper mightily, while states like Cal. and Il. would have their deficits nearly or completely erased. Just a thought.
Reply to this comment
by Stevenapoli7 February 23, 2010 4:48 AM EST
Our education system in based on the Prussian model instituted by the likes of Rockefeller in the early 20th century. Americans are taught to be consumers and employees. Schools should teach us about money, investing, and setting up a business. If just 1 in 10 graduates learn this, they will create enough jobs for eveyone willing to work.
Reply to this comment
by CrisisMaven February 22, 2010 2:57 PM EST
You can't spend your way out of a recession. These jobs were lost when the bubble "created"them in unproduvtive areas such as building houses no one could afford. Now it just takes time to heal. the <a href="http://crisismaven.wordpress.com/2010/02/08/bloom-of-doom-v-we-have-control-of-the-ship-we-have-a-plan/">state is bankrupt already</a>, what good does it do to wreck it even faster?
Reply to this comment
by amerilatino March 2, 2010 4:00 PM EST
Riiiight...the multi-trillion dollar war we just financed, based on faulty, biased -'intelligence'- and the deficit of funds it has created had nothing to do with it, and I have a nice lakeshore timeshare in Death Valley I'd like you to hear about...
by mgunn89512 February 22, 2010 10:04 AM EST
The article fails to mention a lot of Americans are simply poor workers. Irrespective of wages or blaming things on (lack of) safety and environment regulations, I would produce overseas if all these were equal due to relative lack of alcoholism, lack of drugs, greater respect, lack of laws that automatically assume the employer is guilty, lack of FMLA, lack of an entitlement mentality, lack of employees who constantly look at the clock.

I am an employer of a service industry and had to finally resort to sponsoring immigrants which has worked out very well thank God.
Reply to this comment
by amerilatino March 2, 2010 4:07 PM EST
No, you hire them to pay less than the federal minimum and to shirk payroll taxes and labor laws, which they will quietly accept lest you dump them with no severance in a strange country, don't insult our intelligence, we know the drill...
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