Could California Manufacturing Thrive Again?

The nation's leading manufacturing state looks for ways to put the industry on a growth track.
Michele Nash-Hoff

Nash-Hoff: Even though California is perceived as bad for manufacturing, it is the eighth largest market in the world and ranks first in manufacturing for both jobs and output.

Manufacturers Cite California Challenges

I then moderated a panel of the following local manufacturers, who gave their viewpoints of the challenges of doing business in California:  

  • Karl Friedrich Haarburger - VP, Solar Energy Industrial Operations, SOITEC
  • Neal Nordstrom - COO, PureForge
  • Rick Urban - COO, Quality Controlled Manufacturing, Inc.
  • Paul Brown - CFO, The Wheat Group
  • Craig Anderson - EHS Director, Solar Turbines, Inc.

Their comments provided examples of most of the above-cited disadvantages of doing business in California with particular emphasis on the problems of raising taxes retroactively in the last election by the passage of Proposition 30. Neal Nordstrom said, "It isn't just the increase in income taxes and sales taxes, it's the cumulative effect of all of the taxes and the uncertainty of what is happening next." Businesses need to be able to have some certainty in their planning, so passing retroactive taxes makes planning for the future difficult and hurts their profitability greatly.

Anderson commented that their biggest problem was caused by the passage of AB 32. He stated, "The technology to comply with AB 32 does not currently exist, so there is great uncertainty as to whether Solar Turbines will be able to comply with the law by the deadline for compliance."  

Greg Autry, School of Business and Economics, Chapman University, led off the national panel with the topic of trade policy. The U.S. had a trade deficit of $559.8 billion in 2011, of which over half ($295.4 billion) was with China. Every trade agreement signed in the past 20 years has resulted in an increased trade deficit with our trading partners. The U.S. already has an increased trade deficit with Korea and Columbia from the recently signed trade agreements. He said, "States need to stop trying to ‘poach’ companies from other states and work together against our common adversary, China. States cannot compete against another country where the government is subsidizing manufacturing companies to take control of markets."

Autry showed a video he had taped during a visit to China in which an employee of Foxconn stated that the Chinese government had provided the land and built the facility where the iPads and iPhone are being manufactured without cost to Foxconn, as well as covering all of the expenses for running the facility for three years.

He also showed a video interview with an executive of CODA Automotive Inc. that has opened its headquarters in Los Angeles and claims to be making their electric car in the U. S. when, in fact, they are importing the "glider" (a car without the drive train) from China. Miles Automotive partnered with China-based Hafei Saibao Electric Motor Car and Qingyuan Electric Vehicle Co. to establish Coda Automotive as an affiliate company. Autry opined that federal tax rebates should not be going to purchase an electric car for essentially a Chinese import to the detriment of American car manufacturers like General Motors.

Pat Choate, an economist and author of “Saving Capitalism: Keeping America Strong,” covered the importance of the protection of intellectual property to the future of American manufacturing. He said the U.S. is the most innovative country in the world and issues more patents than any other country. However, the recent passage of the America Invents Act converting the U.S. from a "first-to-invent" to "first-to-file" is hurting our innovation. Most growth comes from "disruptive" technology developed by inventors/entrepreneurs of small companies, and first-to-file favors large companies that can file a challenge against these small companies in the hopes of bankrupting them to avoid disruptive technology from harming their business. The length of time for the Patent Office to issue a patent has increased from an average of 18 months to 36 months, which is hurting startup companies. The share of patents granted to U.S. residents and small entities has dropped several percentage points since 2007. He concluded by saying that the constitutionality of the America Invents Act is being challenged, and he hopes that it will be deemed unconstitutional.

Michael Stumo, CEO of the Coalition for a Prosperous America, described the math about how a consumption tax could reduce the domestic tax burden, include imports in our tax base, and narrow the trade deficit, increase U.S. production, and fund reductions in the income tax while maintaining progressivity. He explained that our national Gross Domestic Product (GDP) equals consumption plus investment plus government procurement plus net exports (Total exports minus total imports).

Every one of our trading partners (150 countries) has a form of consumption tax, including value added taxes (VATs), with an average 17% level. These countries rebate these taxes on their exports, while the U.S. does not add a tax on its imports. The taxes are "border adjustable" because they act as a tariff on our goods sent to them and charged the VAT. This has created our more than $500 billion trade deficit with our trading partners, $298 billion with China alone. CPA advocates changes in U.S. trade policy to address this unfairness which tremendously distorts trade flows.

Thea Lee, deputy chief of staff, President's Office at AFL-CIO, spoke passionately on the need to have a national manufacturing strategy that will create good paying jobs for American workers. Key points that she made were: We need to have a longer-term goal of what kind of country we want to be and how to achieve it. It will require some strategic investment in infrastructure. We need to figure out what kind of trade we want and what other countries are doing. Having an ideological position that free trade is good when other countries are pursuing mercantilism is harmful. We need to be responsive to what other countries are doing. We need to have a competitive trade policy. The ultimate goal is not to have more free trade but more prosperity at home. We need to get back to a job creation policy. We haven't done trade policy very well, and we need to rethink our trade policies. We don't need more dopey free trade agreements (taken from notes but not verbatim quotes.)

Please or Register to post comments.

Subscribe to IW Newsletters

IW Marketplace - Buy a Link Now