The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

U.S. manufactur­ing view largely correct

But congressma­n fails to account for population surge over the decades.

- PolitiFact Georgia By Louis Jacobson

There’s no question that manufactur­ing employment in the United States has fallen in recent decades. But did a Republican congressma­n from West Virginia get it right when he cited a statistic on that point?

U.S. Rep. Alex Mooney was broadly accurate when looking at raw employment totals. But the point does not hold up when you factor in population growth — a more telling statistic. (Mooney’s staff did not respond to inquiries for this article.)

First, let’s lookatthe raw numbers.

The number of U.S. manufactur­ing employees bounced around in a fairly narrow range between 1970 and 2000, before plunging between 2000 and 2010. (Left out by Mooney: National manufactur­ing employment has risen modestly but consistent­ly since 2010.)

So that’s in line with what Mooney wrote.

But if you adjust for the surge in U.S. population between 1970 and today, the pattern looks different.

Rather than “holding steady for 30 years,” the percentage of Americans working in manufactur­ing actually fell consistent­ly between 1970 and 2000. The rate of decline accelerate­d a bit between 2000 and 2010, but not by much. And the percentage of Americans working in manufactur­ing has stabilized, and actually increased slightly, since 2010.

Gary Burtless, a Brookings Institutio­n economist, agreed that the

“From 2000-10,

U.S. manufactur­ing employment shrank by a third after holding steady for 30 years.”

— U.S. Rep. Alex Mooney, R-W.Va., in a Wall Street Journal op-ed March 25

pattern depends heavily on which measure you use.

“Measured as a percentage of total employment, manufactur­ing employment has been falling pretty steadily since World War II,” he said. “The growth in manufactur­ing labor productivi­ty, the growth of imported manufactur­ed products as a share of the manufactur­ed goods we consume, and the shift in consumers’ taste away from manufactur­ed goods toward services — especially health care services — has meant that we do not need as many U.S. manufactur­ing employees to produce all the manufactur­ed goods we consume in a given year.”

Our ruling

Mooney’s statistic is accurate in raw numbers. The one caveat is if you measure manufactur­ing employment as a percentage of the population — which accounts for significan­t population growth over that period — you can see a steady decline going back decades. Manufactur­ing’s footprint in the labor market shrank consistent­ly, and by more than half, during the period he cited.

We rate the statement Mostly True.

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