U.S. South, not just
Mexico, stands in way of Rust Belt jobs revival
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[April 07, 2017]
By Howard Schneider
MOBILE,
Ala. (Reuters) - In the years since the 2008 financial crisis, this
southern U.S. port city has attracted a new Airbus factory, seen its
steel industry retool, and gained thousands of jobs building the Navy's
new combat vessel.
Some 300 miles north in Huntsville, new businesses sprout in farm fields
drawn by readily available land, low taxes, flexible labor rules and
improving infrastructure.
As President Trump faces pressure to deliver on his promise to revive
manufacturing in the northern "rust belt" states that put him in the
White House, his biggest challenge may not be Mexico or China, but the
southern U.S. states that form the other pillar of his political base.
States like Alabama have built a presence in the global supply chain in
direct competition with the country's Midwestern industrial heartland,
and even if Trump coaxes jobs back to the United States they may well
head south rather than north.
Whether the "rust belt's" expectations are met will be central to 2018
U.S. mid-term elections and likely frame the presidential race in 2020.
The southern states are reliably Republican, but the party's ability to
repeat its success in Midwestern swing states, such as Michigan, Ohio
and Wisconsin, may hinge on whether the Trump administration delivers on
its economic promises.
For a decade now, nine southern states - North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Tennessee, Kentucky, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, and Texas
- together have accounted for a larger share of the U.S. economy than
nine northern states that defined America as the 20th century's
industrial superpower, according to a Reuters analysis of federal data.
The analysis compared gross domestic product, population and other
factors among northern and Midwestern states that played a key role in
Trump's victory or are typically considered part of the industrial
heartland, with those in the south and along the Gulf Coast that have
become an emerging destination for auto and other investment.
(For graphic on' A battle for jobs' click: http://tmsnrt.rs/2nHSda5)
Florida, a state whose population has boomed under an influx of
retirees, many of them from the north, was excluded.
FREE LAND AND DEGREES
Economists and industrial site consultants say the reasons behind the
trend have moved beyond lower wages and lower levels of unionization.
Per capita income in the south has now almost caught up with that in the
Midwest, and its skilled workforce continues to grow as college
graduates move in.
"Labor? Perceived advantages. Taxes? Some of these are fairly low (tax)
states. Real estate? For big projects that are going to employ three,
four, five thousand people, you can find free land - zero cost land,"
said Darin Buelow, an industrial site specialist with Deloitte
Consulting.
In the south, business executives and development officials interviewed
by Reuters were less likely to call for new tariffs and trade deals than
to worry about how any new regime may disrupt a system they have learned
to work with.
David Fernandes, president of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Alabama, said
that of the roughly 700,000 engines the factory made last year, half
went to Mexico and Canada. The facility also makes engines for cars
assembled at a Toyota plant in Georgetown, Kentucky. "Anything that
hinders the opportunity to provide product to a customer is what is
concerning," he said.
Plants in Kentucky and Indiana gave Toyota a U.S. foothold in the 1980s
and 1990s, but in this century the Japanese carmaker turned to Alabama,
Texas and Mississippi for expansion.
Located on former cotton fields, the company's Huntsville, Alabama,
plant now employs more than 1,400 people and churns out about 3,000
engines a day.
Gunmaker Remington Outdoor [FREDM.UL] came to Huntsville lured by $110
million in tax and other concessions. Its factory here is expected to
eventually employ 2,000, and it has already begun shifting employees
from elsewhere, including 100 from the town in upstate New York where
the company was founded two centuries ago.
Jeremy Littlejohn moved his cloud computing start-up RISC Networks from
Chicago to Asheville, NC, in 2012 for the less hectic pace, but has
found the location a selling point as he grew from 6 to 33 employees.
[to top of second column] |
An Airbus A321 is being assembled in the final assembly line hangar
at the Airbus U.S. Manufacturing Facility in Mobile, Alabama
September 13, 2015. REUTERS/Michael Spooneybarger
Many
of those new workers came from out of state, contributing to North Carolina's
net annual influx of about 46,000 college degree holders. That migration of
educated workers is the norm among the southern states. The rust belt by
contrast saw a net outflow of more than 400,000 residents with college degrees
between 2007 and 2014.
The customers are heading south too. From 1990 to 2015, population in the nine
southern and gulf states grew 43 percent, to more than 76 million, and passed
that of the rust belt states in the late 1990s. Population in the rust belt grew
13 percent, to 63 million, over the same period.
When the Minnesota-based Polaris Industries Inc. began planning a new facility
for its line of outdoor vehicles, "there was no Minnesota play," said Eric
Blackwell, director of operations at the company's new factory outside
Huntsville.
The market for Polaris' machines, popular for farm work, hunting and sport
riding, was growing in the south. Open land was available, and Alabama had
programs to help recruit and train a workforce expected to rise to 1,500.
FROM LAGGARD TO A RISING TIDE
Globalization hit both the north and the south hard. Between 2000 and 2010 each
lost about a third of their manufacturing jobs. But employment rebounded faster
and more broadly in the south.
Between 2000 and 2015, combined private sector employment in nine southern and
gulf coast states still grew 13.5 percent. In the nine northern states total
private sector jobs as of 2015 remained 1.3 percent below their 2000 level,
according to federal data.
The transition dates back to the 1980s, when German and Japanese automakers
began investing in what has become a sprawling, regional industry.
Supplier networks followed, creating even stiffer competition in an industry
already changing due to passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement
(NAFTA) and the growth of automaking in Mexico.
New industries, such as aerospace, followed. Boeing opened a new factory in
Charleston, South Carolina, while decades of federal spending on space and
defense programs created a pool of engineers in Alabama. A surge in energy and
locally important industries like wood products added to the employment gains.
Judith
Adams, vice president at the Alabama State Port Authority, speeds visitors
through warehouses of wood fiber products, steel ingots and other goods ready to
ship abroad. The port is spending $47 million to boost its capacity to 500,000
containers a year from 300,000. The longer-term the goal is to triple that to
1.5 million.
"The vessel sizes are getting bigger. The market is getting bigger. The cargo is
here," Adams said.
When European aircraft maker Airbus scouted sites for its $600 million North
American plant more than a decade ago it settled on a former Air Force base in
Mobile.
As it ramps up production, local officials say 20 suppliers have already arrived
in Airbus' wake, with firms like Ireland's Maas Aviation looking to put 150
people to work painting planes.
"We looked at transportation costs, labor costs, productivity, and it made
sense," said Allan McArtor, chief executive of Airbus Group Inc. "We will be
building single aisle airplanes (in Mobile) for a long, long time."
(Reporting by Howard Schneider; Additional reporting by Jonathan Spicer in
Cleveland; Editing by David Chance and Tomasz Janowski)
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