Keeping with the “job creation” narrative that’s all the rage (in every sense of the word) these days, The Urban Institute recently released a poll study of the top 100 Metropolitan Areas responsible for job creation in America up to the month of October 2011. Data is organized per sector, and the interactive report, which you can check out here, shows the manufacturing industry doing particularly well, creating jobs in almost two-thirds of the cities and urban areas polled.
That’s not even the best news out of Michigan; Lansing-East
Lansing has gained in manufacturing jobs by 23 percent since ’09 and a 2.2
percent gain over the past year, making it the clear frontrunner for the nation
in manufacturing jobs, prompting Lansing Mayor Bernero’s office to blitz the AP
with lengthy proclamations such as this
(although I wouldn’t speak so soon if I was Mayor Bernero, being as the
volatility of the region speaks to a 1 percent decline shown in the month of
October.)
What’s the real reason Michigan is doing so well? Bob Sherer, executive director of the Capital Area Manufacturing Council makes
a few observations in Lansing Business Monthly:
“Our fortunes are tied to the auto industry of course, and
the rebound is predominantly in this sector, especially at GM’s Lansing Delta
Township plant. The higher volume Chevrolet Traverse is now made here and has
replaced the Saturn Outlook. Some of the job additions include workers
transferring from Spring Hill, Tenn.—and the plant is operating on three shifts
while Lansing Grand River remains on one shift. Jobs at supplier plants have
responded to this increased production by adding jobs.
Unlike GM employment growth, which consists solely of recall
and transfers, many of the suppliers have added true new hires. And since
manufacturers use employment agencies extensively to help staff their plants,
some of the job gain at local plants shows up in “business services,” and a
good portion of this industry’s gain of 1,000 from a year ago is actually
linked to manufacturing.”
All good news in the long run: stable jobs running multiple
shifts to keep up with high-volume production.
Music to my ears.
It’s not all rosy, of course, as the region once had about
50,000 workers in the auto industry alone.
Numbers like that may not be seen for quite awhile. Not to mention, the newest local product
investment- lithium batteries- have dropped in demand this year to the point
where Livonia’s A123 Systems laid
off 125 employees back in November despite a $242 million grant from the
Department of Energy given NOT to lay off people. The lay-offs have more to do with delays in
the newest hybrid vehicles more than the lithium industry, however, and A123’s
partner in battery pack production, GM, doesn’t appear to be going anywhere
anytime soon.
All in all, the Urban Institute’s report shows steady, if
unimpressive, improvement in the sector’s growth and permanence. Of course,
I’ll take steady and unimpressive over rapid and unstable any day of the week,
particularly when the country’s economic future is at stake. But that’s just me.
Donal Thoms-Cappello is a freelance writer for Rotor Clip Company.
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ReplyDelete- The manufacturing jobs peabody