montestewart wrote:AFM wrote:payitforward wrote:The WSJ the other day pointed out that if Trump did one of his "create 1000 jobs for Americans" deals every single day, it'd take him 20 years to create the number of jobs that the American economy produces in one month. More lies from the media? No.
How's this work? That's 7,300,000 jobs.
It would be more like 180 days?
PIF's a numbers guy. You just have to trust him.
PS: Agree with the sentiment of his post, but WHOOPS! on that calc. Couldn't find a link to an article online
I'll find the link and post it if possible. The calculation obviously depends on how big that average Trump deal was -- I think the article may have been using the so-called "save 700 jobs" deal rather than my off the cuff number.
The American economy produces about 5,000,000 jobs a month. Of course, it also eliminates jobs each month -- the process is a dynamic one, & the net has been somewhere in the vicinity of 200,000 net job growth a month for quite some time in the Obama era.
The article was using the raw job-creation figure. Of course, you could use the net plus per month figure if you think it's more meaningful. OTOH, Trump isn't going to be able to gin up a 700-job publicity stunt every day either.
Overall, jobs emerge from core economic activities. Neither Donald Trump nor Barack Obama for that matter can create new jobs -- it's kind of a silly idea.
Now, the claim would be that if Donald Trump can stimulate growth in manufacturing in the US, & if he can promote "reshoring" (i.e. bringing back manufacturing that's been off-shored), then he can have a big effect on job growth.
That is a myth. Manufacturing becomes more automated every day, and that process isn't going to slow down.
Yes, companies started manufacturing in China because the cost of labor made products cheaper to build, but that's an advantage only to the degree that human labor is involved. And automation is steadily reducing that advantage day by day. For that reason, for example, Foxconn (the biggest Chinese electronics manufacturer: they make Apple's products, for example) has an initiative to reduce manpower by 30% over the next decade (I think... maybe slightly longer).
New factories will use far fewer people than existing ones, reducing cost. Which means that to compete all manufacturers will move in this direction. I read last week about a new textile factory in I think N. Carolina that produces something like 1.5 million pounds of cotton yarn a week -- with 125 employees!
Moreover, ask yourself where the American economy has grown & will grow in the future. 20 years ago there was no Google. Shortly before that, no company like Google would have been possible at all. Google has a market cap of @ $550 billion. The company employs 60,000 people.
General Motors has a market cap 1/10th as big as Google. It employs @ 115,000 people in the US. Not that long ago GM employed 4 times that many people in the US.
At the time Facebook acquired SnapChat for I think $22 billion, the company had 55 employees. Compare that to GM for an understanding of where the growth of the US economy is taking place. No, that is not going to be reversed.
On the plus side, the more automation reduces manufacturing labor costs the more sensible it is to bring factories back to the US -- to the degree, that is, that this is the market, this is where the customers are. Building close to the customer also reduces costs. But this will have nothing to do with Donald Trump. It's a function of core economic realities.
For anyone interested in the subject, I recommend this book:
https://www.amazon.com/Second-Machine-Age-Prosperity-Technologies-ebook/dp/B00D97HPQI/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1485181410&sr=1-1&keywords=mcafeeBtw, you can give Barack Obama some credit, a lot of credit, for GM's market cap being somewhere @ $50b. Right after his inauguration, in Feb 09, the company's market cap sank below $1 billion. All those conservatives now behind Donald Trump were for letting the company (the whole American automobile industry, pretty much) simply fail.
If Obama hadn't stood up for saving it, most of those disgruntled workers who think their jobs aren't good enough any more, who supported Donald Trump, would have been out of work long ago.