Daily Tribune (Philippines)

HERE’S TRUMP’S AUTO JOBS RECORD

AS U.S. ELECTIONS NEAR,

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General Motors has cut almost 20,000 US jobs since Trump took office

NEW YORK, United States (AFP) — Candidate Donald Trump’s campaign pitch in 2016 to revive US manufactur­ing was critical to his upset election victory over Hillary Clinton, helping him capture vital battlegrou­nd states such as Michigan and Ohio, albeit by narrow margins.

Trump railed against free trade agreements and boasted he would be able to strong-arm Detroit’s

“Big Three” to shift jobs from Mexico to the

United States.

But did he make good on those promises?

How have auto jobs fared under Trump?

The trend in US auto employment has mirrored the larger dynamic in manufactur­ing jobs, rising throughout much of Trump’s presidency, but falling off a cliff in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

US auto employment rose 4.6 percent between January 2017 and the end of 2019, when it stood at around one million.

But since the coronaviru­s crisis erupted, employment fell to 919,500 in September, according to the latest estimates from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, down about 3.7 percent from when Trump took office.

The record is mixed at Detroit’s “Big Three,” which have traditiona­lly been big employers in battlegrou­nd states such as Michigan and Ohio. General Motors has cut almost 20,000 US jobs since Trump took office, while Fiat Chrysler has added about 3,000 jobs, based on the latest company figures. Ford’s overall US employment is about flat over the period, a spokeswoma­n said.

Has production come back from Mexico?

All of the “Big Three” continue to make cars in Mexico, though there has been some movement. In January 2017 shortly before Trump took office, Ford dropped a plan to build a new factory in San Luis Potosi to manufactur­e a new Ford Focus, saying it would shift the $1.6 billion in funds from that venture into a plant in Michigan.

A year later, Fiat Chrysler announced plans to shift production of Ram Heavy Duty trucks from Saltillo, Mexico to Warren, Michigan.

The record is mixed at Detroit’s Big Three.

Trump cheered the FCA announceme­nt, saying: “We are on the right track!” But in February 2019, FCA reversed course, announcing it would continue producing Ram heavy trucks in Mexico. FCA currently has 11 manufactur­ing facilities in Mexico, according to a securities filing.

Kristin Dziczek, a vice president at the Center for Automotive Research in Michigan, said there is no evidence production has shifted under Trump.

In 2020 so far, US auto production is down 22 percent from the prior year, while Mexican output has fallen 19 percent, she said.

“It’s yet to be seen how the USMCA is going to play out on investment decisions,” Dziczek said of the new US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement, which took effect just this July.

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 ?? JIM WATSON/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? US President Donald Trump gestures about illegal immigrants driving foreign cars across the
JIM WATSON/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE US President Donald Trump gestures about illegal immigrants driving foreign cars across the

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