http://www.sfgate.com/columnists/sparks/Since 2001, the United States has lost 2.8 million manufacturing jobs. Hello! Is anybody listening? This is a crisis. Our house is on fire, and few in Congress are paying attention. And, at the rate things are going, the only jobs even college graduates will be able to get will be in the service industry. That's political lingo for flipping hamburgers.
Manufacturing jobs have long since vanished because companies have established factories overseas or have simply outsourced the production, contracting with existing overseas companies. Companies were finding themselves incapable of competing with the flood of imports from Third World countries such as China, where an hourly wage is between 10 and 20 cents. How can American workers compete with that? Since 1990, the number of manufactured goods made overseas and consumed in the United States has doubled.
The political blame is bipartisan. It was President Clinton who signed the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which accelerated the "giant sucking sound." The curmudgeonly presidential contender, Ross Perot, correctly predicted that NAFTA would shift millions of manufacturing jobs south of the border. Perot was right. Now, ironically, even the jobs of those dollar-an-hour Mexican workers are being lost to China and other more impoverished nations.
President Bush has done little to stem the stampede of manufacturing jobs that are leaving and bleeding this country. Instead the president is busily touting the increase in "service sector" jobs. Yes, these jobs did in fact increase. However, properly translated, that'll mean we will soon be able to all sit around in a circle and shine each other's shoes. Service jobs are dominated by the restaurant sector, and these jobs are at wages that are typically just 50 percent, or less, of the lost manufacturing jobs. Big deal, Mr. President -- get serious.