|
|
Expert Says Canadians
Profit Most From NAFTA
By Ed Oliver
May 2003 Print Edition
The people who benefit
the most from NAFTA are the Canadians, our biggest
trading partner, says Jack Healey, Director of Operations
at the Mass. Manufacturing Extension Partnership Program.
He acknowledged that NAFTA will soon expand all the
way South.
When Ross Perot said there would be a giant sucking
sound of jobs going South, they really went East,
says Healey.
 |
|
"We pay more for
one month of an employee's health care than
they pay an employee all year," says
Healey.
"This is a national
issue. We've lost over two million manufacturing
jobs in the last two years in this country.
No one gets upset." But, on the other
hand, "There was no discussion in the
governor's race about loss of manufacturing
jobs" says Healey.
|
| Every job
at Cranston Print Works creates 2.37 additional
supporting jobs. |
Two-thirds of the
manufacturers in our state have fewer than twenty
employees, 82% have fewer than fifty employees and
92% fewer than a hundred says Healey.
"It's a small business, a real small business.
They don't have Chambers of Commerce speaking for
them. They can't leave their places of employment
and go out to lobby. They are trying to make payroll,"
says Healey.
Healey said a large part of our workforce is not highly
educated and cannot work in industries like biotechnology,
but he doubts that lower-end manufacturing like shoe
companies can come back here because of competition
with foreign companies.
American shoe companies buy their products offshore
and import them, he says, either from Korea, China,
Sri Lanka or some other place.
Shoe companies were a traditional industry for Massachusetts,
says Healey. We also made machinery to produce shoes
and ended up making machinery for other industries.
Until ten or fifteen years ago, machinery and equipment
was the biggest industry we had in our state, he says.
That has disappeared primarily because we have not
enacted tort reform for product liability, he says.
For example, if you make a machine in Massachusetts
and put the name of your company on it, a hundred
years from now a person who uses it for a purpose
it wasn't designed can sue the owner of the company.
Many states have broken the chain of liability for
the original manufacturer when a person removes safety
devices and substantially modifies a machine for a
purpose it wasn't intended, but we have a lawyers
lobby here preventing such reform, says Healey.
One thing the Massachusetts
legislature can do for manufacturers besides tort
reform is to provide an education for kids who do
not go on to college or don't finish college, so they
are able to get a gainful job.
Healey asks who is going to train kids for a job?
We don't have a system in place for technical training,
he says.
Big manufacturers used to train workers, but we have
lost 50% of manufacturers with over 500 employees.
The ones that remain don't spend an awful lot of money
on training employees, he says.
The lower tier companies end up learning how to train
their own employees. They used to live off people
leaving the large companies and coming to work for
them, says Healey.
The workforce-training fund established by the legislature
in 1999 was a good response, says Healey. It works
and should be supported.
The money comes from a surplus in the unemployment
insurance fund, but it was raided by the legislature
to support the deficit, he says.
The cost of hospitalization in Massachusetts is far
in excess of other states, and is a serious issue
that will continue to drive businesses away, says
Healey.
One thing we do well in this state is produce things
more efficiently, which cuts costs, says Healey.
The Mass. Manufacturing
Extension Partnership works with small and medium
sized manufacturers to help them improve their productivity,
showing them ways to remain competitive in today's
business climate.
Headquartered in Worcester, the non-profit M.E.P.
charges for services but also receives state and federal
subsidies that may be eliminated, he says.
With the state providing $850,000 for the program,
the federal government in turn provides a much larger
grant. The M.E.P. produces $9.5 million in state taxes
annually through increased productivity, says Healey.
The National Governor's Association has asked Congress
to provide full support this year for the M.E.P.,
which the administration has targeted for a 90 percent
reduction in funding. The program has 400 centers
nationwide.
Manufacturing provides slightly more than 50% of the
economic base of Massachusetts. The base is described
as the part of the economy that actually produces
wealth, says Healey.
In Boston, 38% of the base jobs are in manufacturing.
But if you go outside of Route 495, the manufacturing
base number is 74%, he says.
Every
manufacturing
job creates 2.37 additional supporting jobs.
When you count the number of manufacturing jobs
lost or gained, there
is a multiplier effect. |
|
In
Worcester County, manufacturing accounts for
21% of non-governmental employment and 33% of
non-governmental payroll.
There is an economic multiplier of 2.37 used
for economic models that says every manufacturing
job creates 2.37 additional supporting jobs,
he says. So when you count the number of manufacturing
jobs lost or gained, there is a multiplier effect,
he says.
|
"For a little more
than one third of the salaries, it stands to reason
that we would be about 70% of the economic base,"
says Healey.
"Manufacturing drives the economy. When people
look at numbers of jobs, they don't understand the
economic impact. Outside of Rt. 495, without manufacturing
we're Vermont without the cows."
Manufacturing is in a contracting
period right now. It has the ability to come back,
and it will, but it has these ebbs and flows, says
Healey.
He tells MassNews that people think job-losses are
a reflection of how friendly or unfriendly the state
is toward manufacturing, but he says that is not necessarily
true.
North Carolina, which is viewed as a business friendly
state, has lost more jobs than Massachusetts since
April 1998, he says.
First and foremost, says Healey, all manufacturers
have been affected by the overvalued dollar.
Companies in Canada are delivering essentially the
same machines we make here for 40% less.
"That's been a severe problem for manufacturers
in this state in terms of promoting their products,"
he says.
Also, many of our manufacturers sell to larger manufacturers,
who eventually sell overseas. Overseas sales have
been depressed, he says.
So first, there is the very vast price differential,
says Healey.
The second thing is the Far East, especially a very
aggressive China that has been going out of its way
to produce products and to get market share he says.
There have been real concerns about whether this country
is enforcing its trade laws. There are all kinds of
indications of currency manipulations in the Far East,
says Healey.
It gets complicated, he says, but the issue here is
we are competing but we don't have a Department of
Commerce that is really enforcing its own trade regulations.
Referring
to comments by Rep. Asselin D-Springfield to
MassNews that there are no more manufacturing
jobs coming in, Healey tells MassNews that Springfield
and the whole western Mass. area had a lot of
mold makers.
Three out of four molds are now imported, says
Healey. "We give incentives for American
companies to go offshore. It's cheaper for them."
For all intents and purposes, China can sell
to us with no trade barriers but for us to sell
to them to them we have a 17.5 percent duty,
says Healey.
"Much of the problems we have are on the
micro level, but on the macro level, the government
has to take a firmer hand," he says. |
|
 |
| Rep.
Christopher Asselin (D-Springfield) says there
are no more manufacturing jobs coming in and
we must allow gambling. |
So, the national government
has to do something about the dollar, currency manipulations
and has to start enforcing our trade laws, says Healey.
Countries are also selling below cost and dumping
products on the U.S. market, says Healey. The government
did do something about steel dumping by putting on
tariffs, he says, but only because it was a big issue
and the president wanted both Pennsylvania and Ohio
in the election.
Sidebar:
Made In Massachusetts
Massachusetts
makes a wide range of products including electronics,
pharmaceuticals, golf balls, plastics, razor blades,
textiles, telecommunications hardware, missiles, industrial
machinery, precision measuring tools, chemicals, medical
instruments and paper.
Manufacturing brings new money into the state and
generates new, supporting jobs. It represents half
of our "base" economy jobs. Base economy
jobs are those which produce growth through exports.
According to Mass Insight's "Made in Massachusetts"
report, manufacturing is divided into three categories:
High-Tech includes aerospace, ships, computer hardware,
telecommunications, semiconductors, medical instruments,
other instruments.
Traditional Durable includes machinery, fabricated
metal and other traditional Durables.
Non-Durable includes chemicals, plastics and others.
Using Mass. Taxpayers Foundation data, the report
says that in Greater Boston, non-manufacturing jobs
represent 60% of the base economy with management
consulting, software, private universities and financial
services.
Outer Massachusetts beyond I-495 has a dominant manufacturing
sector, with 31% of base economy employment in Traditional
Durable, 25% in non-durable, 17% in high-tech manufacturing.
The Cape and Islands have very little manufacturing.
The Central and Connecticut Valley regions have a
lot of traditional manufacturing, especially in durables,
and the small Berkshire region has a disproportionately
large share of non-durable manufacturing.
|
|