The U.S. Manufacturing industry has had ups and downs significantly since the 1960s. As a result, there has always been an extreme focus on rectifying the sector. A refined manufacturing industry will directly impact the economy.
But it quickly becomes apparent that restoring U.S. manufacturing capacity is challenging if we consider the status of global manufacturing.
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The need to ignore many existing techniques or strategies is more than apparent. Therefore, more research and investment in advanced technologies are a must.
The capital expenditure required to compete on those lines is prohibitive in the United States.
Two factors significantly negatively impacted U.S. manufacturing between 1980 and 1985: first, Japanese productivity increased quickly, resulting in a 12% price decrease for Japanese goods. Second, Fed Chair Paul Volcker raised U.S. interest rates, which led to strengthening of the U.S. currency.
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Recently, Covid-19 harmed the U.S. manufacturing industry. Overall, the manufacturing industry requires new talents, new approaches, and the availability of modern technologies.
A mature sector functioning on thin margins in many of these manufacturing activities involves a low rate of innovation, making it undesirable for a wealthy nation like the U.S. to try to reclaim its place in them.
“Scientists and engineers are now telling us that there may be breakthroughs—new paradigms—available in a series of fields that could significantly change how we produce complex, high-value technologies and goods, enabling dramatic production efficiencies. For example, advanced materials, digital production, photonics, lightweight composites, 3-D printing, assistive robotics, revolutionary fibers, nano, and fabrication offer breakthrough production paradigms,” writes William B. Bonvillian, MIT Lecturer.