
Advanced Manufacturing
Description
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The United States lost almost one-third of its manufacturing jobs between 2000 and 2010. As higher-paying manufacturing jobs are replaced by lower-paying service jobs, income inequality has been approaching third world levels. In particular, between 1990 and 2013, the median income of men without high school diplomas fell by an astonishing 20% between 1990 and 2013, and that of men with high school diplomas or some college fell by a painful 13%. Innovation has been left largely to software and IT startups, and increasingly U.S. firms operate on a system of "innovate here/produce there,” leaving the manufacturing sector behind. In this book, William Bonvillian and Peter Singer explore how to rethink innovation and revitalize America's declining manufacturing sector. They argue that advanced manufacturing, which employs such innovative technologies as 3-D printing, advanced material, photonics, and robotics in the production process, is the key.
Bonvillian and Singer discuss transformative new production paradigms that could drive up efficiency and drive down costs, describe the new processes and business models that must accompany them, and explore alternative funding methods for startups that must manufacture. They examine the varied attitudes of mainstream economics toward manufacturing, the post-Great Recession policy focus on advanced manufacturing, and lessons from the new advanced manufacturing institutes. They consider the problem of "startup scaleup,” possible new models for training workers, and the role of manufacturing in addressing "secular stagnation” in innovation, growth, the middle classes, productivity rates, and related investment. As recent political turmoil shows, the stakes could not be higher.
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Persons
Peter L. Singer has been a Policy Advisor in the MIT Washington Office, studied international political economy at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Information Studies, and authored studies of entrepreneurship, infrastructure policy, and federal R&D innovation.
Content
1 Introduction: Social Disruption, Legacy Barriers, and Innovation Challenges in U.S. Manufacturing 1
2 The Backdrop: Manufacturing's Economic History 15
3 International Competition and the Decline of U.S. Manufacturing 37
4 Economic Perspectives on Manufacturing 65
5 Advanced Manufacturing Emerges at the Federal Level 101
6 The Advanced Manufacturing Innovation Institute Model 131
7 Start-up Scale-up: Addressing the Manufacturing Challenge for Start-ups 187
8 Workforce Education and Advanced Manufacturing 217
9 Manufacturing and the Future of Work 243
10 Conclusion: Manufacturing Matters More Than Ever 265
Notes 277
References 345
Index 389
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