Manufacturing
McJobs at Nissan and Elsewhere
By
Phil Mattera for the Dirt
Diggers Digest
Getting a manufacturing job is no longer your ticket to the middle class. Busted unions, off-shoring destroyed the American Middle Class (photo from the Library of Congress collection) |
Bring
back manufacturing jobs: For years this has been put forth as the silver bullet
that would reverse the decline in U.S. living standards and put the economy
back on a fast track.
The
only problem is that today’s production positions are not our grandparents’
factory jobs.
In
fact, they are often as substandard as the much reviled McJobs of the service
sector.
The
latest evidence of this comes in a report by the UC Berkeley Center for
Labor Research and Education, which has issued a series of studies on how the
growth of poorly paid jobs in retailing and fast food have burdened government
with ever-rising social safety net costs.
Now
the Center shows how the same problem arises from the deterioration of job
quality in manufacturing.
What
makes these hidden taxpayer costs all the more galling is that manufacturing
companies enjoy special benefits in the federal tax code and receive lavish
state and local economic development subsidies, the rationale for which is that
the financial assistance supposedly helps create high-quality jobs.
The
Center’s analysis deals in aggregates and thus does not single out individual
companies, but it is not difficult to think of specific firms that contribute
to the vicious cycle.
A
suitable poster child, it seems to me, is Nissan. It is one of those foreign
carmakers credited with investing in U.S. manufacturing, though like the other
transplants it did so in a pernicious way.
First,
it tried to avoid being unionized by locating its facilities in states such as
Mississippi and Tennessee that are known to be unfriendly to organized labor.
After
the United Auto Workers nonetheless launched an organizing drive, the company
has done everything possible to thwart the union.
Second,
while boasting that its hourly wage rates for permanent, full-time workers are
close to those of the Big Three domestic automakers, Nissan has denied those
pay levels to large chunks of its workforce.
Roughly
half of those working at the company’s plant in Canton, Mississippi are temps or leased workers with much lower
pay and little in the way of benefits.
It
is significant that in the Center’s report, Mississippi — which has also
attracted manufacturing investments from other foreign firms such as Toyota and
Yokohama Rubber — has the highest rate of participation (59 percent) in safety
net programs by families of production workers.
The
Magnolia State may have experienced a manufacturing revival, but many of those
new jobs are so poorly paid that they are creating a burden for taxpayers.
At
the same time, Mississippi is among the more generous states in dishing out the
subsidies to those foreign investors.
My
colleague Kasia Tarczynska and I discovered that the value of the
incentive package given to Nissan in 2000 will turn out to cost $1.3 billion —
far more than was originally reported.
Toyota
got a $354 million deal in 2007, and Yokohama
Rubber got a $130 million one in 2013.
There’s
a lot of talk these days about bad trade deals and resulting job losses. We
also need to worry about what happens when we gain employment from
international investment but the jobs turn out to be lousy ones.