In Trump stronghold,
factories are humming but paychecks are thin
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[December 09, 2016]
By Nick Carey and Andy Sullivan
GRAND
RAPIDS, Mich./WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When President-elect Donald Trump
returns to this factory town on Friday for a victory celebration, he
will find a region that is already experiencing the manufacturing
renaissance he promised on the campaign trail.
With local factories employing more workers than any time since the late
1990s, assembly line jobs are not hard to find. Those that pay a decent
wage, however, are harder to come by.
"We can barely make ends meet and we're stuck going nowhere," said auto
parts worker Michael Baum, 22, as he smoked a cigarette in the parking
lot of a Family Dollar discount store.
Trump won the White House thanks to strong support from workers in
Midwestern cities like Grand Rapids who have seen their living standards
erode as the United States shed manufacturing jobs. He beat Democratic
rival Hillary Clinton by a margin of 14 percent in the four counties
that make up the Grand Rapids metropolitan area, helping him carry
Michigan by a margin of 0.27 percent.
Trump has promised to punish companies that shift work overseas,
pressuring manufacturers like United Technologies Corp. to reverse their
outsourcing plans.
"Our jobs are being stolen like candy from a baby," Trump said at a
rally here the night before the Nov. 8 election.
Grand Rapids, a hub of furniture makers and auto parts suppliers, has
not been immune to outsourcing. At least 488 people have lost their jobs
over the past year as two manufacturers, Dematic Corp and Leon
Automotive Interiors, have shifted work to other countries, U.S. Labor
Department filings show.
But new hiring has more than made up for those losses. The number of
factory jobs in the region has grown by 40 percent since the depths of
the recession in 2009, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
and unemployment stands at 2.9 percent, well below the national average
of 4.6 percent.
Local businesses now say their top concern is finding qualified workers,
according to Rick Baker, president of the Grand Rapids Area Chamber of
Commerce.
Even as jobs have returned to Grand Rapids, earnings remain low. At $846
per week, average weekly wages in the region rank 46th among the 50
largest U.S. metropolitan areas, BLS data show.
The Heart of West Michigan United Way, a local charity, said demand for
its services has remained steady over the past several years even as the
economy has picked up.
While manufacturing helped lift millions of unskilled workers into the
U.S. middle class in the 20th Century, that is no longer the case, said
Lou Glazier, president of Michigan Future, a think tank that focuses on
the state's economy.
[to top of second column] |
U.S. President-elect Donald Trump speaks at the USA Thank You Tour
event at the Iowa Events Center in Des Moines, Iowa, U.S., December
8, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Factories still pay good wages to workers who have specialized skills, such as
welding or computer programing, but routine work no longer pays enough to cover
living expenses, he said.
Grand Rapids is "participating in the old economy and doing well in it, in terms
of jobs. It's just that the economy is no longer producing high wages," Glazier
said.
MORE WITH LESS
While Trump and others blame global competition for the decline in factory work,
automation has played a large role as well, economists say. The U.S.
manufacturing sector has more than doubled output over the past 35 years even as
it had shed one-third of its work force, according to the nonpartisan Brookings
Institution.
"We're
doing more today with the same amount of people that we had eight years ago,"
said Bob Roth, chief executive officer of RoMan Manufacturing, which make glass
and electrical components.
At RoMan, assembly line workers start at $13 per hour but skilled workers can
earn up to $30 an hour, Roth said. The company pays community college tuition
for those who wish to upgrade their skills, but those who fail to improve their
productivity enough to justify a higher wage within two years are fired, he
said.
Such prospects come as little consolation to workers like Baum, who are trying
to figure out a way to boost their earnings on their own. For now, they are
pinning their hopes on Trump.
"If he can bring good paying jobs back to America," he said, "I'll vote for him
again."
(Reporting by Nick Carey in Grand Rapids and Andy Sullivan in Washington;
Editing by Tom Brown)
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