Catching up on a lot of backlog reading this weekend, this piece by nostr:npub1a2cww4kn9wqte4ry70vyfwqyqvpswksna27rtxd8vty6c74era8sdcw83a on US manufacturing, this piece is really good
https://www.lynalden.com/reshoring/ .
I had a simplistic view of the dire situation and danger of manufacturing deprivation in the US before I started diving in, and Lyn has wrapped this up in detail, in so many different perspective, very well.
The steel industry decline that was so international and local political driven led to a cluster effect of decline of other industries, and smaller manufactures and businesses tied around it - rust-belt cities, urban decay, population migration, are all the aftermath. To boost revenue, more funding to service industries and cut backs on manufacturing. That and the rise of globalization.
There are some tax free incentives to set up manufacturing in the US, but have to be very smart about it as import tariff, labour can be high. Export cost from the US though is really cheap so that's a plus point. I think boosting nanotech and additive tech as a support mechanism for big industries would be a win but there has to be a bigger boost in reshoring / rebuilding industries.
I believe the trade deficit happened sooner though in the 80s /90s? Adding some details on another manufacturing book by Ro Khanna on US policies on manufacturing. There's also another book I read called prototype nation on how China build their manufacturing empires - pretty impressive how they went about it.
If anything, absorb all the good, learn from the bad, rebuild
nostr:note1fg5mk0k5eddhrul0e06jjf8a8d2lhwcq4cdw2ku7qhakmehpuz5sf4t9ut
