The labor market is slowing, but it’s all good news in the White House.

The U.S. added 139,000 jobs in May, a slight decline from April, according to a jobs report released Friday. The unemployment rate remained at 4.2 percent, still within the ballpark of historic lows reached in 2023, when the unemployment rate reached 3.4 percent—the lowest it had been in more than five decades. But within the folds of the report hid a major red flag for Donald Trump’s agenda: The U.S. is still bleeding manufacturing jobs.

But even the president’s favorite conservative network couldn’t hide its dismay at the slight manufacturing downturn.

“Now, 8,000 manufacturing jobs were lost in May. That’s not what you wanted to see,” said Fox Business host Stuart Varney.

  • @Placebonickname@lemmy.world
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    11 month ago

    U mean asking manufacturers to pay MORE to produce in America encourages them to move production to other countries? You’re kidding!

    • It’s worse than that.

      Let’s say I want to open a widget factory in America because of the tariffs. Sure, I can avoid the tariffs on the widgets themselves by making them here, but there’s a big problem…

      What about the tariffs on the materials needed to make them?

      So Trump wants to strong-arm a minerals deal with some country via a protection racket only to… tariff them?

      Jesus Christ.

      Unironically, depending on how the supply chain is arranged for your industry, it may actually be cheaper to move your manufacturing off shore and eat the tariff once instead of getting nickeled and dimed for every single item you need to assemble on shore. Hell, Vietnam already figured out you can ship Chinese products through to America as grey imports and skim off the top.

      It is hard for me to articulate just how fucking stupid all of this is. It’s no small wonder how this guy bankrupted six casinos.

      But hey, Art of the Deal, baby.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        It is hard for me to articulate just how fucking stupid all of this is. It’s no small wonder how this guy bankrupted six casinos.

        I always assumed they were bankrupted on purpose as part of some sort of money laundering scheme, but you’re bringing me around to the idea that it may actually have been sheer stupidity rather than crime.

      • nickwitha_k (he/him)
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        1 month ago

        Unironically, depending on how the supply chain is arranged for your industry, it may actually be cheaper to move your manufacturing off shore and eat the tariff once instead of getting nickeled and dimed for every single item you need to assemble on shore.

        And that’s not even accounting for forecasting, which is still necessary in the stupid-frail JIT approach. Noone will want to sign a long-term supply contract when they could get screwed by sudden tarrifs and the JIT people have to rely on luck to avoid subjecting customers to sticker-price whiplash.

        It’s all just so fucking stupid.

        Edit: Not sure what my auto-correct meant there. To be clear I was intending to state that JIT logistics is stupidly frail because it is unable to smooth out uncertainties in supply chains and a single distribution or price swing in a necessary component can result in the material costs of the product going so high that the business either has to sell at unpredictable prices, eat the difference, or set the base price higher and pocket the difference when favorable.

    • @EndRedStateSubsidies@leminal.space
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      01 month ago

      Lol, you entirely misunderstand the issue.

      Americans lack the skills and machining of modern manufacturing. It’s so expensive because they’d have to make buildings and teach skills that are already everywhere in China.

      But sure, laugh like a fucking moron we’re taking behind the world because we don’t take care of workers or infrastructure.

      • Bakkoda
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        21 month ago

        Americans with those skills don’t want to work for shit wages. I can show you plenty of electrician/engineer/mechanic job postings for sub 60k if you would like. I’ve spent two decades in mfg environments watching poor business decisions cripple the workforce and push any and all qualified individuals out.

        • @lemming741@lemmy.world
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          11 month ago

          They’re so fucking myopic. A $50k per year chemical manufacturing operator is going to fuck up $20k worth of equipment and finished product a year compared to a $65k per year.

          A $100k/yr technician will save your bacon twice a month and make it look easy. The $70k/yr parts changer will misdiagnose away that $30k you ‘saved’ in about 6 months.