Washington Politicians Aren’t Telling the Truth About Trade
Auto assembly line in Princeton, Indiana. (Cropped photo: Zbigniew Bzdak/KRT/Newscom via The Daily Signal) |
That pessimistic view seemed to be confirmed earlier this year, when Carrier announced plans to move 2,100 jobs from Indianapolis to Mexico. Every time a U.S. manufacturing facility closes, it’s headline news.
But here’s the part of the story many people never hear. Although Indiana is losing 2,100 jobs to Mexico, over 100,000 Hoosiers who work in manufacturing are employed by foreign-owned companies. Toyota is adding 300 jobs to its Princeton plant, Honda is adding 100 new jobs in Greensburg, and Subaru is adding 1,200 new jobs to its facility in Lafayette.
While Carrier has been called “greedy” for moving to Mexico, no one in Indiana is calling Toyota, Honda, or Subaru greedy for choosing to invest in the United States.
In total, over 2 million American manufacturing workers are employed by foreign-owned companies. And while American companies have invested over $700 billion in foreign production facilities since 2000, foreign-owned companies have invested over $1.3 trillion in the U. S. manufacturing operations during the same time frame.
The result: a $614 billion manufacturing investment “surplus” for the United States from 2000 to 2015. U.S. manufacturing output has never been higher, and foreign investment in the United States is a big reason why.
The United States should strive to attract more job-creating investment, not adopt protectionist policies that could scare it off.
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Bryan Riley (@BryanGeneRiley) is the "Jay Van Andel Senior Policy Analyst" in Trade Policy at the Center for Trade and Economics (CTE) at The Institute for Economic Freedom and Opportunity at The Heritage Foundation. The Heritage Foundation provides state-of-the-art analytical and policy research on the role that free markets, the rule of law, and democratic institutions play in fostering economic growth in countries around the world.
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