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The New Coffee Room

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  3. The future of manufacturing

The future of manufacturing

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  • Doctor PhibesD Offline
    Doctor PhibesD Offline
    Doctor Phibes
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    So much for all those manufacturing jobs we're bringing back.

    I was only joking

    LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
    • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

      So much for all those manufacturing jobs we're bringing back.

      LuFins DadL Offline
      LuFins DadL Offline
      LuFins Dad
      wrote on last edited by
      #4

      @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

      So much for all those manufacturing jobs we're bringing back.

      Actually, it just might.

      The Brad

      RenaudaR 1 Reply Last reply
      • LuFins DadL Offline
        LuFins DadL Offline
        LuFins Dad
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        At least more than now…

        The Brad

        1 Reply Last reply
        • Doctor PhibesD Offline
          Doctor PhibesD Offline
          Doctor Phibes
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

          I was only joking

          Tom-KT MikM 2 Replies Last reply
          • LuFins DadL LuFins Dad

            @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

            So much for all those manufacturing jobs we're bringing back.

            Actually, it just might.

            RenaudaR Offline
            RenaudaR Offline
            Renauda
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            @LuFins-Dad said in The future of manufacturing:

            @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

            So much for all those manufacturing jobs we're bringing back.

            Actually, it just might.

            Without organized labour.

            There will be consequences of course….

            The enlightened proletariat will be the next victims of the Trumperdorian Reaction.

            Elbows up!

            1 Reply Last reply
            • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

              I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

              Tom-KT Offline
              Tom-KT Offline
              Tom-K
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

              I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

              Yup, seen that too. And the new business that are out there are fly by night. They come and they go and the big businesses just stay and stay. And grow and grow. I used to "compete" against Ecolab in the day. No one could do that anymore. They OWN the market.

              1 Reply Last reply
              • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                MikM Away
                MikM Away
                Mik
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

                Doctor PhibesD taiwan_girlT 2 Replies Last reply
                • MikM Mik

                  @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                  I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                  It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                  Doctor PhibesD Offline
                  Doctor PhibesD Offline
                  Doctor Phibes
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  @Mik said in The future of manufacturing:

                  @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                  I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                  It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                  Right, and we've been in the middle of a second and now arguably third industrial revolution for the last few decades. Trying to bring manufacturing back is totally missing the point if the goal is to increase jobs involving manual labor. There won't be any manual labor.

                  I was only joking

                  LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
                  • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                    @Mik said in The future of manufacturing:

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                    I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                    It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                    Right, and we've been in the middle of a second and now arguably third industrial revolution for the last few decades. Trying to bring manufacturing back is totally missing the point if the goal is to increase jobs involving manual labor. There won't be any manual labor.

                    LuFins DadL Offline
                    LuFins DadL Offline
                    LuFins Dad
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                    @Mik said in The future of manufacturing:

                    @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                    I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                    It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                    Right, and we've been in the middle of a second and now arguably third industrial revolution for the last few decades. Trying to bring manufacturing back is totally missing the point if the goal is to increase jobs involving manual labor. There won't be any manual labor.

                    I wasn’t talking about manual labor, I was talking about manufacturing jobs. If shoe factory moves from Vietnam with 5000 workers to the US with robotics and 20 technicians, that’s still a net growth in the US for manufacturing. The first thing holding it back is the robotics equipment is still massively more expensive than 5000 Vietnamese workers. The second thing is even when they reach the break even point for the equipment, it will be cheaper to hire 15 Vietnamese techs than 15 US technicians…

                    The Brad

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • B Offline
                      B Offline
                      blondie
                      wrote on last edited by blondie
                      #12

                      Being a sewist, I also think of textiles and clothing. The U.S. (Canada too) are huge consumers. I think the U.S. buys more to wear than any country globally. Not googling, but I think I read something like 70% of U.S. textiles and garments are made in countries like China, Vietnam, India. These areas of manufacturing account for something like 10% of global CO2 emissions. I’m sure too we’ve heard of the water pollution devastation due to dyeing and finishing processes. I think textile making ranks real high, like ?#3, as far as industrial pollution. These 2 industries employ millions globally and generate huge profits for big companies. What is your President’s grand plan for this other than overseas tariffs? Are Americans going to revive cotton production? How about wool? Where’s your farm land now for this, given our huge appetite for apparel? Is it hot enough, cold enough, nicely fertile now in the U.S. to produce huge amounts of quality natural fibre? Can you, given our present obscene consumption with clothing? What about synthetic fibre production and manufacturing? The U.S. is the #1 exporter of polyethylene for this purpose. Are you going to turn this around, to create textiles, to further pollute your own rivers making synthetics? Are you going to employ masses of low paid home grown labor needed for sewing 24/7 in workrooms the size of football fields? Yes, lots is automated now, cutting edge (ha)with lasers, precisely done overseas .. but lots remains manual labor.

                      …Just stuff I think of as I piece a quilt with cotton produced in Japan, thread in Italy, on a machine (designed in Germany) made in Taiwan.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • JollyJ Offline
                        JollyJ Offline
                        Jolly
                        wrote on last edited by Jolly
                        #13

                        You don't know shit from shinola about growing cotton, do you?

                        We can produce enough fiber to supply a good bit of the world world, if need be. The rub comes in producing textiles.

                        There, you have a point. But then, most of that business will remain abroad, no matter if tariffs are high.

                        “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                        Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • B Offline
                          B Offline
                          blondie
                          wrote on last edited by blondie
                          #14

                          Well you got me there @Jolly . No, I’ve never bled picking cotton; I’ve only seen a cotton gin in a museum, my ancestors weren’t sharecroppers, or slave owners, and my experience with garment sewing with Huntsville’s Martha Pullen was limited to me just living there learning using Swiss and Egyptian cotton, not your SW produced Supima, which yes, is a decent export. I do know the U.S. is a major producer of cotton fibre. But there’s no way you’ve the land, climate, people or industry to satisfy yourselves and the world. And you don’t do wool like the Aussie’s.

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • JollyJ Offline
                            JollyJ Offline
                            Jolly
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #15

                            My great-grandfather was a small scale cotton farmer. My in-laws picked cotton by hand, to help put food on the table. My SIL's husband was raised on a 3000 acre farm, where they grew about 1200 acres of cotton. Somewhere around here, there's a picture of seven-year old me on a cotton picker. It's not the King Cotton it once was, but there is still a good bit grown in the South.

                            We don't grow as much cotton as we used to. We used to grow so much, the Feds instituted cotton allotments, limiting production. Nowadays, the price is low enough that a lot of acreage is planted in other things. Farmers plant what they can make money with and nowadays that's sugar cane if you're not too far north to do so. I live not too far from once was the largest row crop farm in North America, at around 70,000 acres and they don't grow a single cotton plant, but they could if the price was right.

                            There's a lot of production capacity we simply aren't using.

                            “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                            Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                            AxtremusA 1 Reply Last reply
                            • JollyJ Jolly

                              My great-grandfather was a small scale cotton farmer. My in-laws picked cotton by hand, to help put food on the table. My SIL's husband was raised on a 3000 acre farm, where they grew about 1200 acres of cotton. Somewhere around here, there's a picture of seven-year old me on a cotton picker. It's not the King Cotton it once was, but there is still a good bit grown in the South.

                              We don't grow as much cotton as we used to. We used to grow so much, the Feds instituted cotton allotments, limiting production. Nowadays, the price is low enough that a lot of acreage is planted in other things. Farmers plant what they can make money with and nowadays that's sugar cane if you're not too far north to do so. I live not too far from once was the largest row crop farm in North America, at around 70,000 acres and they don't grow a single cotton plant, but they could if the price was right.

                              There's a lot of production capacity we simply aren't using.

                              AxtremusA Offline
                              AxtremusA Offline
                              Axtremus
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #16

                              @Jolly

                              How does your cotton farming comments factor into the "factory of the future" discussion?

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • AxtremusA Offline
                                AxtremusA Offline
                                Axtremus
                                wrote last edited by
                                #17

                                Here, read this article about a South Carolina town that used to be a textile hub that then transformed into a car manufacturing hub:

                                https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/12/us/south-carolina-manufacturing-tariffs.html?unlocked_article_code=1._E4.MMQD.hlicTLu0wmJJ

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                • MikM Mik

                                  @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                                  I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                                  It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                                  taiwan_girlT Offline
                                  taiwan_girlT Offline
                                  taiwan_girl
                                  wrote last edited by
                                  #18

                                  @Mik said in The future of manufacturing:

                                  @Doctor-Phibes said in The future of manufacturing:

                                  I've been around a lot of manufacturing plants over the last 30-odd years and it's very noticable how there are fewer and fewer people and more and more automation. That trend is not going to change.

                                  It’s been that way since the Industrial Revolution

                                  Exactly. Just from teh news of the recent dock workers contract where they were happy that the contract had a limit on the automation on the docks.

                                  @LuFins-Dad said in The future of manufacturing:

                                  If shoe factory moves from Vietnam with 5000 workers to the US with robotics and 20 technicians, that’s still a net growth in the US for manufacturing. The first thing holding it back is the robotics equipment is still massively more expensive than 5000 Vietnamese workers.

                                  Yup. I remember (it was a few years ago) talking to a guy who was a sales guy for Capterpiller(?) (or a company like that) and he was saying how hard it was to sell heavy equipment to India. They could hire 1000 workers at a USD$1/day to move at much dirt as a heavy equipment and at a cheaper price.

                                  File1759.jpg

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nycJ Online
                                    jon-nyc
                                    wrote last edited by
                                    #19

                                    I remember living in Mexico in the early 90s and noticing how many workers they’d have doing manual labor and thinking they must be cheaper than imported machines.

                                    Only non-witches get due process.

                                    • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    • taiwan_girlT Offline
                                      taiwan_girlT Offline
                                      taiwan_girl
                                      wrote last edited by
                                      #20

                                      The graphic, made by the Financial Times and based on a 2024 survey from the Cato Institute, shows that while 80% of Americans believe the country would be better off with more manufacturing jobs, just 25% believe they would individually be better off working in a factory.

                                      LuFins DadL 1 Reply Last reply
                                      • HoraceH Online
                                        HoraceH Online
                                        Horace
                                        wrote last edited by
                                        #21

                                        "Do you think America would be better off with more <any sort of> jobs" would probably get an 80% "yes" rate. It's a loaded question, though. If you have to interfere with the market through protectionism in order to create those jobs, I doubt people would find it so obvious that those jobs are a good goal.

                                        Education is extremely important.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • AxtremusA Offline
                                          AxtremusA Offline
                                          Axtremus
                                          wrote last edited by Axtremus
                                          #22

                                          “I would be better off if I worked in a factory.”
                                          • 25% of Americans agree
                                          • 73% disagree
                                          • 2% currently work in a factory

                                          It's quite noteworthy that 25% of Americans think they will better off working "in a factory" while only 2% of American currently do. I think it shows that there is a significant portion of the population who aspires to "working in factory".

                                          I doubt you'll get as positive a response if you replace "factory" with "farm" or "sanitation" or "inns and hotels" or "restaurants," etc.

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