Manufacturing Employment Data – 1979 to 2007

I have had difficulty finding good economic data on manufacturing jobs. I have posted about this previously but have trouble finding much worth posting about: Worldwide Manufacturing Job DataManufacturing Jobs. The Unites States Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics has published some interesting data and so here is a look at some of that data.

The table shows average annual productivity gains (output per hour, in USA dollars – I think it is not clear) – the 2007 output totals are from the United Nations data I posted about last week (Data on Top Manufacturing Countries).

Average Annual Manufacturing Productivity Gains by Country
Country 1979-1990 1990-1995 1995-2000 2000-2007 1979-2007 2007 Output
$USA billion
Taiwan 6.1 4.7 5.6 6.4 5.9
Korea NA 9.4 10.8 7.6 NA 241
USA 2.8 3.7 5.6 4.6 3.9 1,831
France 3.8 3.4 4.6 3.5 3.8 296
Japan 3.8 3.3 3.4 3.8 3.6 926
United Kingdom 4.1 2.8 2.7 3.9 3.6 342
Germany 2.1 2.9 3.7 3.8 3.0 670
Spain 3.3 3.1 0.8 2.1 2.5 208
Canada 2.1 3.4 3.8 1.1 2.4 218
Italy 3.4 3.8 1.4 -.2 2.2 345

The countries that were part of the study but are not included in the table above: Australia, Belgium, Denmark, Netherlands, Norway, Sweden.

Manufacturing productivity increased in 14 of 16 countries in 2007, according to the study. The United States of America increase of 4.1 was the fourth largest among the 16 economies and was slightly above the 3.9 percent U.S. average annual increase since 1979. 15 of the 16 countries increased manufacturing output in 2007.

9 countries increased manufacturing hours worked in 2007, the USA increased 2.3% (below their average increase since 1979). Hours worked decreased for all countries in the period of 2000-2007 (UK has had the largest decrease 3.9% annual average decrease, the USA in next at 3.1%).

Manufacturing employment increased in 10 countries in 2007. From 2000-2007 the USA has experienced average annual declines of 3% in manufacturing employment (the second sharpest drop to the UK which has fallen 4%). From 1979-2007 the USA annual declines averaged 1.2% (only Taiwan.9% and Spain .1% showed increases). From 2000-2007 four countries show slight average annual increases: Spain .5%, Korea .4%, Taiwan .2% and Italy .2%. From 2000-2007 only 3 countries showed annual average decreases in output: Canada -.3%, Italy -.2% and UK – .1%.

Hourly manufacturing compensation has increased in all countries for the period 1979-2007 (data shown for this item is in each national currency: USA 4.6% average annual increases, Spain up 7.2% annually, Taiwan up 7%, UK 6.8%, Germany 4.4%, Japan 4.2%.

via: Canada’s Manufacturing Crisis in International Perspective

Related: posts on employmentTop 10 Manufacturing Countries 2006

Comments

11 responses to “Manufacturing Employment Data – 1979 to 2007”

  1. When looking at the long term data, USA manufacturing output continues to increase. For decades people have been repeating the claim that the manufacturing base is eroding. It has not been true…

  2. 663,000 jobs were lost in the USA in March and the unemployment rate rose from 8.1 to 8.5 percent…

  3. […] Is China’s Recovery for Real? – Misuse of Statistics – Mania in Financial Markets – Manufacturing Employment Data – 1979 to 2007 – The Long-Term USA Federal Budget Outlook – Data Shows Subprime Mortgages Were Failing […]

  4. Korea (1.8% in 1990, 3% in 2008), Mexico (1.7% to 2.6%) and India (1.4% to 2.5%) were the only countries to increase their percentage of manufacturing output by the largest manufacturing countries (other than China, of course, which grew from 3.9% to 18.5%)…

  5. Brent Avatar
    Brent

    How much has USA population and total jobs increased from 1979 to 2008? Or,what was US population in 1979 vs 2008? What was total US employment in 1979 vs 2008? Where could I find this information.

  6. The main stories are not jobs moving but jobs being eliminated by productivity improvement and China growing manufacturing output not a decline in manufacturing output in the USA…

  7. Since a recent low in February 2010, total payroll employment has grown by 1.5 million. Job gains occurred in professional and business services, health care, leisure and hospitality, and mining. Employment in manufacturing continued to trend up…

  8. Shelly Avatar

    Hello. I am a student of economics and I was searching some kinda data like this for my project on Manufacturing Employment Data.. thanks to the search engine, that it helped me to get a site like yours and the information which I was looking since week..

    Love your site and the given data..

  9. […] manufacturing employment is on a steady decline everywhere, which is consistent with all the other data we have seen over the years, everywhere. Norway has […]

  10. […] and more good. This is a good thing as it allows us to afford more good with less cost. But it does mean fewer manufacturing jobs, which are very good jobs, exist. This is a shame but something we shouldn’t anticipate […]

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