Sentences with phrase «more manufacturing jobs»

Major corporations expecting to expand and create more manufacturing jobs include BMW, General Electric, Boeing, Michelin and Fluor engineering company.
The two men share a passion to see more manufacturing jobs created in the US.
But the fact that China has lost more manufacturing jobs than the U.S. over the past 20 years is a strong indication that playing hardball with the Chinese isn't going to do anything to increase employment in the United States.

Not exact matches

A noted decrease in job growth is less of a concern if it's accompanied by signs «that manufacturing activity is starting to rebound, that businesses are spending more on investment, and that consumers are continuing to spend,» he said.
Plank — who has vowed to add more jobs in Baltimore where the company is based — is a notable voice in the manufacturing world.
It's actually against the law to make money — that is the job of the government, which over the last decade has been more and more willing to manufacture money in unjustified amounts.
But Trump offers a more dire outlook, arguing that only he can keep Boeing from moving those high - paying manufacturing jobs from Washington to China.
Beginning with the auto bailout, which the administration now claims cost taxpayers $ 9.3 billion but saved more than a million jobs, Obama doubled down on his commitment to manufacturing, setting a goal of doubling American exports between 2009 and 2014.
The incumbent party tends to win counties with more highly skilled service sector jobs, not the type that are typically lost to trade, and lose counties in which there is a high concentration of trade sensitive low - skilled manufacturing.
Policy makers favor the manufacturing sector because it has historically provided good paying jobs for middle - skill workers, or those folks who have more than a high school education but not a four - year college degree.
The new jobs push the complex's total more than 6,000 manufacturing jobs — a tremendous economic boost to the state and to many families and individuals.
Sheikh says he tried mightily as head of StatsCan to shift limited resources away from collecting data about the country's shrinking manufacturing sector — more than 300,000 jobs have been shed in Ontario and Quebec over the past decade — so the agency could spend more on tracking the boom in services and trade.
It found that since 1871, technology has created more jobs than it's destroyed, suggesting that job growth in traditionally white - collar fields has more than offset the loss of jobs in the agricultural and manufacturing sectors.
In terms of the large - scale, mass - produced economy, the utility of low - skill human workers is rapidly diminishing, as many blue - collar jobs (e.g., in manufacturing) and white - collar jobs (e.g., processing insurance paperwork) can be handled much more cheaply by automated systems.
From Bush 1 to present, our Country has lost more than 55,000 factories, 6,000,000 manufacturing jobs and accumulated Trade Deficits of more than 12 Trillion Dollars.
As far as consumer welfare goes, this is a much more important statistic than the number of manufacturing jobs lost over the period.
More Jobs, Less Pollution: Growing the Recycling Economy in the U.S. shows the economic and environmental benefits of achieving a 75 percent national recycling rate, including job creation — particularly in manufacturing, pollution reduction and the strengthening of local communities and employment bases.
Myriota Chief Executive Officer Dr Alex Grant says the Internet of Things industry is set to boom across the globe and Myriota has the potential to create significantly more advanced manufacturing jobs over the coming years and undertake production runs of millions of units for export.
It would be interesting to read more on that, particularly to counter arguments that the U.S. can not manufacture or that manufacturing jobs have been replaced by machines (if this were true on a large scale, one would expect higher unemployment in China).
That was enough to wipe out more than half a million manufacturing jobs in central Canada.
The silver lining as you have described so well, is the return to more regional economic activity and that, it would seem, ultimately brings back the manufacturing jobs lost to the overseas manufacturing sector.
Energy experts say it is unlikely that the tariffs will create more than a small number of American solar manufacturing jobs, since low - wage countries will continue to have a competitive edge.
He explains how the rise of the «1099 workforce» is not limited to Silicon Valley; more and more traditional jobs in fields like manufacturing are turning to contractors to perform the same tasks full - time employees used to do.
However, if new pipelines help to boost Canada's already overpriced petrodollar, she won't be able to help Ontario avoid more job losses in the manufacturing sector.
During roughly the same time frame, the province has also lost more than 300,000 manufacturing jobs.
In six years since the Conservatives have arrived, we've lost 500,000 good - paying manufacturing jobs, more than half of them because of the fact that we're not internalizing the environmental costs.
London and Windsor lost more than 30 percent of their manufacturing jobs in the last decade.
We have lost more than 300,000 manufacturing jobs while adding more than 300,000 government sector jobs to our tax rolls.
Forty - seven per cent of respondents said Canada is more likely to lose jobs under the TPP as Canadian companies move manufacturing and other jobs to low - wage countries, such as Vietnam where the average wage is 65 cents an hour.
Rate - cut expectations may grow stronger over the next few months if weakness in the sub-prime mortgage market grows, job creation continues to slow, and the manufacturing indexes show more persistent contraction.
In the process, though, the petro - charged currency also wreaked havoc on a manufacturing sector that shed more than half a million jobs.
In 2006, the full brunt of the breaks» removal hit, and manufacturers, in particular pharmaceutical companies, began closing plants; an estimated 100,000 manufacturing jobs have been lost, with more indirect jobs going away as a result.
Six years after the start of a deep recession and a growing call for more middle - class manufacturing jobs, one American industry is tackling workforce development in a unique way.
Critics of the agreement point to the falling numbers of US manufacturing jobs, particularly in the auto sector, while Mexican employment in that sector has more than quadrupled.
Following the election of President Donald Trump, who ran on an economic platform of bring back manufacturing jobs that had been sent from the U.S. to points overseas and pledged to «Make America Great Again,» more attention has been paid to the offshoring trends that have permeated the economy for a generation.
Much of the debate over the past years about the benefits and the costs global specialization, primarily the rapid advance of China as a major manufacturing center has been less about the financial costs — the $ 12 trillion dollars of additional liquidity that the US consumers offered to the world (the cumulative US trade deficit from 1990 through 2015 compared to the over $ 3 trillion dollars in trade surplus run - up by China over this same period — and more in terms of the jobs lost and the impact of foreign products on American wages in manufacturing.
The prosperous postwar economy fostered the exodus of an upwardly mobile working class from the city in search of the more genuinely American housing to be found in the suburbs, and at the same time, the entry - level skilled and semiskilled manufacturing jobs once held by project residents disappeared from the urban core.
America needs to ween itself from this huge government jobs bailout and invest in positive investments like infastructure, Space exploration, subsidizing more clean energy programs and manufactures, changing our energy grid to be more flexible to different kinds of input, and education.
The wealth creation caused by capitalism trickles down by creating jobs, which allows people to purchase, which creates the need to manufacture more, which creates more jobs, etc...
Human work is the instrument God uses to get things done he wants done: the planet cared for, people educated, housed, the mind expanded through study, the heart lifted through the manufacture and playing of musical instruments... the poor fed, the sick healed... Our charitable giving helps the poor, but creating a decent job helps them more.
And many high - income manufacturing jobs for individuals with more marketable skills have long since departed for less expensive countries.
The food, beverage and consumer products industry supports nearly 1.5 million American manufacturing jobs and accounts for more than $ 45 billion in U.S. exports each year.
With two young children at home, she wanted hours that more closely matched theirs in order to spend more time together — something her manufacturing job did not offer.
[20] Bombardier is a major employer in Belfast and a punitive tariff would adversely affect more than 4,000 manufacturing jobs.
A little more than three months ago, a meat packing company announced it would expand its Oneida County plant and create 22 new manufacturing jobs in exchange for a $ 330,000 government grant.
«In the advanced manufacturing fields over the next few years, more than 17,000 new jobs will be created,» said Mayor Brown.
Some in the area are thankful for the jobs the pill factory provides — but others worry that a plant that manufactures oxycodone is more curse than blessing.
SolarCity, the California company that will occupy the Western Hemisphere's largest solar panel manufacturing plant and serve as the keystone of the Buffalo Billion, forecasts more professional and better - paying positions at its Buffalo operations, while dropping jobs at the gigantic RiverBend complex to a minimum of 500.
As the analysis notes, Buffalo has been bleeding manufacturing jobs for more than a 20 years now, while education and health services sector has increased.
In doing so, Counties provide more than half of UK jobs in key sectors like construction, manufacturing and the motor trade.
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