Business Day (Nigeria)

The ‘China shock’ has not been as bad as Donald Trump thinks

Growth in service sector jobs belies the president’s vision of American ‘carnage’

- GILLIAN TETT

If you were to ask most ordinary American voters what has happened to their country’s manufactur­ers in recent years, they might howl with horror or mutter about “carnage”.

After all, Donald Trump swept to power alleging that Chinese competitor­s have “killed” American factories and jobs. Hence the simmering USChina trade war, and this week’s highstake talks in Beijing.

But if you want a more accurate picture of what Chinese competitio­n has done to US industry, it is worth looking at some material presented at last weekend’s American Economics Associatio­n’s convention in Atlanta.

In recent years, an army of economists has analysed the issue that sparks Mr Trump’s ire: the impact of Chinese competitio­n on America. And while this number-crunching supports the president’s rhetoric in some areas, the data also suggest it is time to reframe the debate — away from manufactur- ing to services.

Let us start with the place where the facts back Mr Trump. Yes, in recent decades, the US has seen traditiona­l manufactur­ing jobs shrivel dramatical­ly. Moreover, studies by economists such as David Autor show this decline was most stark in regions and industries exposed to Chinese competitio­n.

Sometimes this was because American factories closed their doors, or moved overseas. But, as the economists Teresa Fort, Justin Pierce and Peter Schott told the AEA, US companies have also replaced human workers with robots at home, often to cut costs because of overseas competitio­n (and, as they stress, it is often hard to disentangl­e precisely whether it is robots or trade displacing most jobs).

This process often inflicts enormous local pain, or the economic “carnage” that Mr Trump talks about. A second paper co-authored by Prof Autor and presented to the AEA shows that this shock is correlated with a collapse in marriage rates (because it is mostly the men, not women, who lose work, making them less attractive partners). Other research also shows correlatio­ns with rising opioid addiction and child poverty rates.

Worse still, the impact of a “China shock” is magnified across the economy by house prices, as the economists Robert Feenstra, Hong Ma and Yuan Xu told the AEA.

This all makes for grim reading. But there is also a big caveat — more accurately, a silver lining to this cloud — that Mr Trump has hitherto ignored: while so-called manufactur­ing jobs have shrivelled, this does not capture what has happened to “manufactur­ing firms”.

Calculatio­ns from Profs Fort, Pierce and Schott show that between 1977 and 2012, the number of “manufactur­ing firm workers” employed in “manufactur­ing plants” halved from just under 20m to nearer 10m. However, the employees in “non-manufactur­ing plants” that were owned by “manufactur­ing firms” rose from 13m to 23m, primarily due to an explosion in service sector jobs such as design and IT.

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