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"Our average customer wants a turnaround in less than three weeks," Dietzen says. "You're not going to get that in China." Still, economist Cliff Waldman of the industry research group Manufacturers Alliance/MAPI doubts that U.S. factories will continue to expand their payrolls in the long run. Manufacturing, he says, is "not a job creator for the U.S., basically." Global competition will always force factory managers to try to replace expensive workers with machines or with low-wage labor overseas, Waldman says. Mark Perry, a visiting scholar at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, likens the loss of manufacturing jobs to the exodus of workers from farms between the 19th and 20th centuries. If that migration hadn't happened, Perry says, "we'd still have millions of people working in agriculture. Now, we can employ fewer people in factories." But the transition can be painful, he concedes. The U.S. remains No. 1 in global manufacturing, accounting for 18 percent of global manufacturing output in 2008. But China is catching up. Its share of manufacturing output jumped from about 6 percent in 1998 to 15 percent in 2008. Critics have a ready explanation for that: unfair competition. Robert Scott of the left-leaning Economic Policy Institute says China is cheating in world markets
-- keeping its currency artificially low to make Chinese products less expensive overseas and unfairly subsidizing its exporters. Scott and other critics want to see the Obama administration support U.S. manufacturers by pressuring Beijing to drop the subsidies and let its currency rise freely. A higher-valued Chinese currency would make U.S. exports cheaper for Chinese consumers. Centerline CEO Dietzen says she isn't fazed by Chinese manufacturing. Some of her customers have placed orders with Chinese companies, she says, only to return, frustrated, to her company. Chinese factories want mainly big orders. And they demand lots of time to fill them. Dietzen says her clients are "finding when they get their parts back from China, they're not always what they want. So we end up doing the work anyway." "A common misperception," Greatbatch CEO Hook says, is that the United States doesn't make anything anymore. The reality is rather different. "We need a highly skilled work force," Hook says. "So it's very advantageous to be in a country like the United States where people are educated and ready to be hired."
[Associated
Press;
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