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Businesses United States

When It's Time To Scale, US Manufacturing Hits a Wall 268

curtwoodward writes "MIT researchers looked at 150 of the school's spin-out companies in manufacturing businesses over a decade, and found many of them hit the same chasm: Once it was time to ramp up to large-scale production, they couldn't find domestic investors and had to go overseas. The bulk of the research will be published later this year, but it raises an interesting conundrum — if an MIT-pedigreed company has serious trouble ramping up production in the U.S., how much harder is it for the 'average' business that wants to grow? Is it even still possible to do high-tech manufacturing here — or should it be?" Intel seems to be doing OK with U.S. manufacturing, but they have the advantage of established operations.
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When It's Time To Scale, US Manufacturing Hits a Wall

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:03PM (#43040427)

    Americans have no one to blame but themselves and their short sighted insistence that they be paid enough money to keep themselves in food, shelter, transportation and medical care here in America, rather than what it would take to do all of the above in Bangladesh.

    • it's wrong to feel entitled to food, housing and health care. Seriously. He said this. And the worst part was it wasn't news. The only news was 47% of Americans felt slighted when they should have felt horrified.
    • Re:Spoiled Americans (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @11:20PM (#43042265) Homepage Journal

      Yes - and no.

      I'm getting to be a pretty old guy. I remember the initial rounds in off shoring. The steel industry was in trouble here, in the states. Companies were telling the unions, "We're going bankrupt, we need to renegotiate, we need to cut costs. If you'll take a small pay cut, let us get on our feet, we'll make it up to you. We need help, or we're out of business!"

      How much of that claim was in good faith, it's impossible to judge, really. But, the portrayal was mostly accurate.

      I'm the son of a steel worker. I heard the union men saying that "No one in the world can make steel like we do. Go ahead, take your plant to the Netherlands (or wherever), you'll be back in five years, looking for qualified steel workers!"

      Well - plants were moved overseas - and they haven't come back. In fact, steel plants have been opened in third world countries, and they operate at a profit. Even little brown men and women from tribal towns in India can make quality steel. (Don't ask why China has such a problem, I haven't figured that out.)

      Greed plays a big part in all of this, and the greed isn't all on one side, either. Where I grew up, EVERYONE had almost new cars, a boat in the yard, expensive stereo equipment - you name it. If it was new and shiny, if it was "fashionable", if it was considered "high tech", then all the union men had one, because they could afford it.

      I thought my dad was wrong, when he refused to deal with the steel companies, and time has proven me to be right. Today, we only have a small fraction of the steel industry that we had in 1980.

      Had the unions accepted a three percent pay cut and a reduction in benefits, most of those jobs would still be here. It's not like any union man was going to miss a meal by taking a three percent pay cut. They worked hard at the plant, but they were on easy street at the end of the work day.

      The steel companies led the off shoring of American manufacturing out of necessity. Other manufacturing industries sat back, watched, and followed suit.

      We'll never get back what we have lost, and it all came about because steel workers were greedy.

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 ) <slashdot@borowicz. o r g> on Thursday February 28, 2013 @11:35PM (#43042367) Homepage Journal
        Why would the jobs still be here? The companies probably would have ended up like hostess, always coming back to the table with their hand out. A cut might have delayed things by afew years, but a couple of unions caving in would not have changed the last 50 years. The owners might have made afew more bucks.
      • Andy Grove (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Didn't Andy Grove famously write a few years back about how scaling up innovations into mass production was a serious obstacle which was bleeding jobs and product ideas overseas to countries more efficient at this?

        http://www.businessweek.com/magazine/content/10_28/b4186048358596.htm [businessweek.com]

        I'm surprised Slashdot is only just coming around to the issue just now.

      • by rve ( 4436 ) on Friday March 01, 2013 @02:42AM (#43043141)

        Go ahead, take your plant to the Netherlands (or wherever), you'll be back in five years, looking for qualified steel workers!

        How can a US based company ever compete with a low wage, low cost of living country like the Netherlands, where employees aren't entitled to any benefits and will work 12+ hours a day for a basic meal?

      • Re:Spoiled Americans (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 01, 2013 @03:47AM (#43043301)

        You _seriously_ need to read "And the Wolf Finally Came: the Decline and Fall of the American Steel Industry".

        Cooperation at some places like J&L was genuine and in good faith.

        At others such as Wheeling Pitt and US Steel, not so much.

        (In the case of Wheeling Pitt, workers cooperated with WHX & Ron LaBow and lost everything)

        The one thing they both had in common? For the most part, they both failed.

        Don't get me wrong, in some places steel survived, but only because management wanted/needed/planned for it years in advance.

        (ie US Steel knew in the 70's they had to cut capacity, and that the Mon Valley would only have one hot side when the dust cleared. Yet they told the workers it was their fault: for not meeting new quotas, for wanting COLA, for wanting workman's comp when injured on the job or electing the Homestead Five)

        A good primary example is ET and Irvin survived even though workers wouldn't budge. Some even said go ahead and close it like the others. It survived because it had perviously been selected by management for modernization and they actually did follow through.

        For the most part, vertically integrated producers are gone; mini mills have ruled.

        Far as big manufacturing and such, as long as companies have access to mobile work forces (ie not captive ones) wages will primarily control where they will go as labor is the biggest expense in general.

        Unfortunately you just can't live in the US for 8000/yr, have a family, be debt free, save for retirement (you think there will be a pension, social security? ask the pensioners who worked for Bethlehem Steel after ISG raided the pension just like WHX and tossed them to the PBGC after a life time of work), have children and try to provide a better opportunity for those children.

        Seriously read the book; Hoerr doesn't just make random statements and claims, he has the references to prove it. Read the foot notes after you finish each chapter.

        He and his family are from Tube City; he even worked in the National Works to put himself through school...

      • by Pecisk ( 688001 )

        " The steel industry was in trouble here, in the states. Companies were telling the unions, "We're going bankrupt, we need to renegotiate, we need to cut costs. If you'll take a small pay cut, let us get on our feet, we'll make it up to you. We need help, or we're out of business!""

        And you take their word for it? You know when company goes bankrupt, no one actually tells you about it. It just happens. I really smell fish here. I would really like to see numbers of that company on that year. It feels more li

        • It seems to me the unions, when presented with situations like this ("we'll make it up to you"), need to demand a contract where the union workers will profit somehow if the company does turn around and regain profitability, rather than just relying on good faith.

      • by BVis ( 267028 )

        Yeah, greedy workers! How dare they expect to share in the company's successes! They should just take the scraps they're given and be happy about it. The executive's summer homes don't buy themselves, after all.

        The jobs didn't go overseas because the steel workers wanted too much money. They went overseas because management felt they were entitled to obscene profits, and didn't care whose lives they ruined in the process. We're not talking about paper pushers here, we're talking about steel workers wor

    • by grcumb ( 781340 )

      Americans have no one to blame but themselves and their short sighted insistence that they be paid enough money to keep themselves in food, shelter, transportation and medical care here in America, rather than what it would take to do all of the above in Bangladesh.

      I take your point - it's a good one. But the story here seems to be a lack of confidence in the ability to get a return on investment. I'm actually half-inclined to see the core problem here as investors who ask, 'Why should I get a modest rate of return here at home when I can get a higher rate of return elsewhere?'

      That's fine, as far as it goes, but it doesn't consider quality, long-term stability, or even pride and brand identity. In other words, I'm not sure that even backing down and selling out comple

      • "Why should I invest money here, when it requires me to realize a taxable gain and bring it to the US, when I can leave the money overseas and invest it in a manufacturing plant that makes me even more money?"

    • Really? Tell me all about semiconductor manufacturing in Bangladesh.

  • Simple Fix (Score:4, Interesting)

    by CanHasDIY ( 1672858 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:04PM (#43040441) Homepage Journal

    Just switch your focus to manufacturing things that either can't be made in/sold to/bought from other countries (like cryptography software).

    Or maybe guns. Americans love American made guns.

    • Re:Simple Fix (Score:4, Insightful)

      by flyneye ( 84093 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:28PM (#43040663) Homepage

      The mistake made here is that scaling production is a GOOD thing. We have seen endless examples of Mega corps. tanking and taking employees and investors with it. The secret, good ol' fly will share with you is; keep it small, specialize,shun investors and if your product is worthy you will live like a king. Complete control is impossible on a large scale and only breeds asshats dropping resume' on your desk reeking from useless degrees, boring accomplishments and assbackward statistical management techniques that wouldn't even appeal to a $cientologist with a warehouse of half built gizmosensors.
              Small house craftmanship is the way to live and work if you want the American dream. You can keep your deadlines, heart attacks and useless ranks of management siphoning your value and devaluing your product. I will also reiterate "FUCK INVESTORS", if they really wanted to make money, they would do what you are doing and put their money into themselves. If they can't do it at that point, they didn't DESERVE any money because they can't HANDLE money and would've only contributed to the problems of the world caused by themselves anyway. Darwin and Bob were both right about Normals; "survival of the fittest" and " if you act like a dumbass, they'll treat you as an equal".

      • Re:Simple Fix (Score:5, Interesting)

        by peragrin ( 659227 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:43PM (#43040781)

        a company needs investors. The trick is Wall street isn't about investing it is a gambling addiction.

        Seriously for one month make all trades last for a minimum of 1 hour. and watch the volume dry up. As Day trading bankers actually have to invest in companies instead of gambling.

        • by pubwvj ( 1045960 )

          "a company needs investors."

          Not really. That is a common mythconception. Grow slowly and borrow instead of getting investors. That means you benefit more from your innovation. There is no better place for you to invest your own money, and time, than in your own creations where you have control.

          • Re:Simple Fix (Score:5, Insightful)

            by icebike ( 68054 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @09:17PM (#43041453)

            "a company needs investors."

            Not really. That is a common mythconception. Grow slowly and borrow instead of getting investors. That means you benefit more from your innovation. There is no better place for you to invest your own money, and time, than in your own creations where you have control.

            But you have pretty much written off "Scaling Up" when you take this approach.

            It may be a better long term practice for small business that wants to remain small business, but it is not a solution to meeting demand
            or or any of those other things that you typically expect when a product becomes popular and widely available. Its fine for a family business, more suited to the service industry than to manufacturing.

            You also run the risk of leaving the door wide open for competitors, some of whom will be using your inventions, but none of whom you will have the money to fight, because you insist on growing slowly. It doesn't matter if you are seeking to replace the College Yearbook, and end up creating Facebook, or seeking a better PDA and end up creating the iPhone. If you don't scale quickly and massively, you will lose your market to the next guy who will go all in. Just ask Palm or Psion or My Space.

            You have to scale, or forever remain a niche product. Tesla is facing this test as we speak. DeLorean failed it.

            • Re:Simple Fix (Score:5, Insightful)

              by g1powermac ( 812562 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @10:54PM (#43042095)
              As a business owner myself, I do agree with this, to a point. There are times, especially if you are a manufacturer, that you desperately need capital to just keep up with the ever growing orders. And if you ever get decent publicity, you could be screwed very quickly as you won't have nearly enough inventory to supply the massive increase of demand. And when that happens, a couple of things can occur. One would be that because you can't supply demand, a hole has opened up ready for a competitor to take over. Or, maybe worse, people lose interest in the whole concept of the product because they just can't purchase it. The other problem comes when you throw all the money you have at making more only to find out that still isn't enough. But, you're so strapped up in debt that you literally now must produce more to pay the debt, but you can't because you ran out of money to make more. You end up forcing yourself to go bankrupt even though you have lots of sales.

              However, this all hinges on one very major assumption: that the product being sold has the potential of being widely popular where you could easily see exponential growth with just a little marketing, whether expected or not. A true niche product probably has very little possibility of going mainstream and so it can grow at a much slower rate and at possibly higher margins. Just take a look at niche software products like Adobe's stuff or any point of sale system. The prices are high, and especially for the point of sale stuff, not that complicated in features. Like what my one computer science professor always said, the money is in the niche software, and this goes for all markets as long as its a true niche serving a real need. Stuff that isn't widely known but serves a general need is not a niche, it is just starting out.
          • How would you start a business, even a small one, with out using money? Do you max out your credit cards and hope your business is successful enough to payoff your credit cards? Money can be supplied upfront by the person starting the company or by soliciting investors to supply the funds. Investing does not automatically have to involve public stocks or engaging Wall Street investment brokerage houses. And every business is different. Want to start of new chip foundry? Just pony up approximately $50 millio

        • by flyneye ( 84093 )

          Think bonsai.
          Its about the guys who specialize, who can get a nice product line going on their own. When it hits,you have some nice money yourself from your product and you outsource production to production to your specs. I give you T.V. Jones http://www.tvjones.com/ [tvjones.com] . A guy whose passion led to a sweet product, site sales, bulk sales for industry, celebrity endorsement,and a lifestyle that reflects his passion. This guy has been interesting to watch and operates in a fast paced stylized group of people

  • RTFA, and am still left with a host of questions. The linked article is about as informative as the summary (unusual, how'd that happen?) and as bereft of any real information. The core issue though, the lack of an American manufacturing base for consumer goods, should worry everyone. I mean, dog food made in China? Why?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by sycodon ( 149926 )

      I'm betting it all comes down to government regulatory barriers. Financial, zoning, environmental, etc. And to be clear, the barrier will be costs, not refusals, like that idiot in Chicago that used his power to threaten Chick-fil-a.

    • You do realize that the US still leads in manufacturing right? (as of 2009)
      http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-505123_162-36742134/manufacturing-surprise58-the-us-still-leads-in-making-things/ [cbsnews.com]

      Its possible that China has passed us in the 4 years since that graph, but being #2 in the world and only slightly behind a country 4 times our size is hardly a "serious problem", particularly when we dwarf the next closest competitors.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        It is a problem as long as people think it is. The big problem is that people want to make jobs, and the backbone of the US used to be manufacturing goods. Now that citizens need jobs and a lot of them, it is easy to push for more manufacturing. Some of the jobs are very technical and the skill level goes down to uneducated levels, so it hits a wide spectrum of skills.

        Personally, I do think that handmade goods or even goods made in the US are typically made to a higher standard (more durable, better compone

      • by Imrik ( 148191 )

        Note that the article you linked also shows that manufacturing in the US is declining. Existing businesses are continuing to make the goods they've always made, with some variation, but little is going on in the way of new production.

  • Manufacturing (Score:5, Informative)

    by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:05PM (#43040449) Journal
    The US produces something like 18% of the world's GDP [seekingalpha.com]. It's silly to say the US can't manufacture things. There are problems with labor-intensive manufacturing, but manufacturing overall is still something that's done in the US.

    But that is not even the point of the study. If you read the article, it mentions that at least some of the companies stayed in the US to do manufacturing (the article doesn't give numbers, it says "often they moved out of the US for manufacturing"). The problem they had was they couldn't find investors in the US. They had to find foreign investors. Sometimes they found foreign investors and managed to stay in the US for manufacturing, but there is the assumption that foreign investors encouraged manufacturing out of the US as well. THAT is what this study is about, not a poorly-informed speculation on the decline of US manufacturing.
    • by sycodon ( 149926 )

      Don't forget that investors look at more than just the product and the market. The look at the regulatory environment too because that can derail an otherwise profitable venture.

      • by CanHasDIY ( 1672858 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:16PM (#43040551) Homepage Journal

        Don't forget that investors look at more than just the product and the market. The look at the regulatory environment too because that can derail an otherwise profitable venture.

        Yea, how dare those bastards make clean air and water for everyone priorities over profits for the select few!

        • Re:Manufacturing (Score:5, Insightful)

          by LordLucless ( 582312 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:19PM (#43040583)

          Yea, how dare those bastards make clean air and water for everyone priorities over profits for the select few!

          Because our pure-hearted regulators only ever do what's best for everyone, and never use their authority to line their own pockets, or stifle their friends' competitors.

          • Yea, how dare those bastards make clean air and water for everyone priorities over profits for the select few!

            Because our pure-hearted regulators only ever do what's best for everyone, and never use their authority to line their own pockets, or stifle their friends' competitors.

            Yea, you've got me there.

          • Yea, how dare those bastards make clean air and water for everyone priorities over profits for the select few!

            Because our pure-hearted regulators only ever do what's best for everyone, and never use their authority to line their own pockets, or stifle their friends' competitors.

            And they most certainly would never, ever use regulations to erect barriers-to-entry to small startups entering a market like automobile manufacturing (the 1948 Tucker Torpedo comes to mind) for the last 6 decades and more, nor remove choices from the public (TV/internet/telecom). /sarc

            Strat

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      The US produces something like 18% of the world's GDP. It's silly to say the US can't manufacture things.

      The US's Comparative Advantage is BS. BS bubbles, BS accounting, BS wars, BS political campaigns, and BS marketing. We get world investors to buy into fads, bubbles, ponzi's, and scams like no other country.

      We don't need to make anything real when we have mastered fakery. Doing real things if for newbie countries.

      • That's one of the more babbly posts I've seen on slashdot. Keep it up and one day you'll outdo the timecube guy.
      • Well apparently BS is all that is needed to make other countries look second rate hacks. It's puzzling how Americans can be so stupid, fat, provincial, and linguistically challenged but still lead the world in GDP, manufacturing output, agricultural exports, world famous Universities and Colleges, and of course military power. What does that say about the second placers? Maybe they spend to much time evaluating US shortcomings and need to concentrate on their own well being.

    • by jrumney ( 197329 )

      The number one foreign investor for bankrolling large scale manufacturing startup is the Chinese Government, conditional on moving manufacturing to China. And the costs are huge, so investment options are limited; a startup has no credit record, so they need to pay suppliers up front, and as the product is unproven, distributors won't pay until the product has left the retail shelves.

    • The other side of the coin is that there is an entire industry of design and manufacturing service providers intended to help local entrepreneurs negotiate the challenges of shifting to offshore production. Nothing like that exists on such a scale for incubating domestic production.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    It's a matter of financing, not manufacturing capability. You should have worded it differently in the summary.

    So what if they had the "MIT name behind them" (or any of those other overpriced big-name schools like Stanford or Harvard for that matter). Did they even consider that maybe their business plan and/or product sucked ass and investors here in the US knew better than to spend money on it?

    • by mbkennel ( 97636 )

      If the business plan or product really sucked then they would have folded, not gone overseas.

      Financiers have strong cultural prejudices against US manufacturing because of their political outlook.

  • where are they!!!? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:08PM (#43040479)

    Where are all the Job Creators!! I hear so much about the favorable treatment they deserve.

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:22PM (#43040609) Journal

      Where are all the Job Creators!! I hear so much about the favorable treatment they deserve.

      Indeed. I just kicked a dude in the face. I helped create a job for both a surgeon and an orthodontist. It feels so good to be a job creator.

      • If the government gave me a ton of free money, I could *totally* create jobs too, by going on a spending binge. Why doesn't anyone ever consider that solution?

        Why doesn't anyone consider how fortunate the economy would be to give me free stuff?

    • They are taking their money to China and working with the communist.
  • by the eric conspiracy ( 20178 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:09PM (#43040481)

    The US does very well with big ticket items or things that can be scaled by automation. The world's largest manufacturing facility is Boeing's main assembly building in Everett WA.

    Where it gets dicey is when it can't be automated and a lot of manual labor is needed. Like assembling stuff like iPhones. Then the wage difference really bites.

    The MIT story didn't give much detail but I bet a lot of these startups were making little gizmos like the iPhone.

    • Where it gets dicey is when it can't be automated and a lot of manual labor is needed.

      Actually, the word "manufacturing" etymologically-wise, means precisely that: "manu facere", to make by hand. Perhaps a different neologism like "robofacturing" ought to be used instead?

    • Actually, nearly ALL things can and should be made by robotics. And yes, that includes iphone. That is what they are working on right now, over in China.
      • For a mass produced item like iphone this is true. But there are some items that will only have 1000 of them made, ever. Or after the first 1000 they want a tweak for the next 1000, and so forth. Maybe the circuit boards can be automated but much of the process will still involve manual labor (inspecting the cut boards, modifying the manufacturing equipment, building a bed of nails tester, etc. There is also a large amount of interaction between the manufacturer and the designer and having the two compan

    • Many things that are manufactured do not need to be scaled to mass production. However the US has some of the best electronics manufacturers for smaller runs, with much faster turn around than the big scale foreign manufacturers who only do runs of 15,000 units or higher. Even if a company manufactures some products overseas there is still a need for smaller manufacturing for the same company, or even the same product (ie, prototypes).

    • by AK Marc ( 707885 )
      The labor is a small portion of the iPhone cost. Regulations are most of the cost difference between US and China manufacturing costs. That, and even if the costs were the same, Apple would still make them in China because it's the only place currently in the world where you can place an order for 10,000,000 widgets and get them on time and at the agreed price. In the US they just laugh at you, other places may take your money, but you won't get 10,000,000 widgets on time.
  • by erice ( 13380 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:27PM (#43040649) Homepage

    That is what TFA is really saying, not that America can not manufacture. That jives with my own experience. The US investment community is addicted to quick turn Internet services that can turn around in a matter of months. Startups that actually need to produce physical products are starving because investors don't want to put their money into projects that take millions of dollars and several years to break even.

    What is interesting is that they are foreign investors willing to fund manufacturing. Some are even willing to manufacture in the US. So it is a US investor psychology problem not a global one.

    • by radtea ( 464814 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @08:00PM (#43040903)

      Startups that actually need to produce physical products are starving because investors don't want to put their money into projects that take millions of dollars and several years to break even.

      If it ever does (break even). Scaling up is an incredibly high-risk business, because some things just don't scale.

      In Canada we recently opened a national chemical engineering facility (http://www.greencentrecanada.com/) that is specifically aimed at helping researchers scale chemical processes that work at lab-scale (grams) to industrial scale (kilograms to tonnes). There are plenty of things that just don't work outside of the lab, and new processes in particular are often invented by experts who are the only people in the world who can make them work successfully.

      The skills required for scaling up are very different from those required for discovery, and having something like this were there is a specific group of experts in scaling up is a godsend to university spin-off businesses, and adds a level of reassurance to investors that simply couldn't exist otherwise.

  • The real issues (Score:3, Interesting)

    by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:30PM (#43040677) Journal
    is that AMerica was a powerhouse. In addition, we had a LARGE R&D fund by the feds. However, starting with reagan, and being pushed with just about every president since then, we have quit investing into America. In particular, one area that is insane is that we have all of these free trade agreements, where it says that nations are not allowed to dump, subsidize, or manipulate their money. Yet, China is the worst one, and to this day continues to get worse with manipulating their money, dumping and subsidizing.

    Until American politicians stand up and balance the budget AND then tell China (and others) that we will no longer allow them to cheat on the FTA, then we will continue our downhill slide.
  • by Silicon_Knight ( 66140 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:31PM (#43040685)

    I'm a small business owner (I created OpenBeam: http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ttstam/openbeam-an-open-source-miniature-construction-sys [kickstarter.com]). It is basically a small, nice version of an erector set, that is currently being used for building 3D printers. (See: http://reprap.org/wiki/Kossel [reprap.org]).

    US manufacturing is *hard*, for sure, for small businesses. In fact, the system is set up so that I'm better off shipping jobs overseas.

    We buy our extrusions from a small mill in California, a family owned business. Our first batch was great. We made a small engineering change on the next batch and ordered the extrusions in October of 2012. We received the parts in early December, and the black anodizing was crap - it literally looks like it's been dive bombed by seagulls with diarrhea. We shipped back 700 of 2000 pieces for rework, and we still have not received it back. Meanwhile, I'm out of stock, I have thousands of dollars of backorders that I can't fill, and I still have no idea when I'll get replacement stock back in. And to make things worse, when we complained initially about the quality of the parts, the answer we got was literally "you're small potatoes, we don't have time for you"

    Meanwhile half way across the globe, my injection molder (http://blog.openbeamusa.com/2012/05/18/behind-the-scenes-injection-molding/) is churning out parts, 50,000 at a time. He always delivers when he says he'll deliver. With UPS and Expeditors I can get goods landed on my doorstep anywhere from 48 hours to less than 3 weeks for ocean freight shipping. It costed me $1000 to ocean freight half a metric *ton* of parts, and it'll be here in 3 weeks. The reason for going overseas for injection molding is simple: The material we use is a high end glass-reinforced nylon and the only shops the US that can handle it are military and aerospace molders and they demand an incredible premium.

    On top of all this, I currently import a bunch of motors, pulleys, bearings for my 3D printer kits, US customs requires that I file an individual HTS classification for each line item, and taxes me individually. I then pay my old coworker's kid $20/hr, which is a princely sum for a 14 year old girl, to do my packaging and kitting. However, If I paid some guys overseas $10.00 a day to do the same job, I can declare my imported goods as "construction toy set" and avoid paying import taxes all-together. Therefore, there are absolutely NO incentives for me to keep the packaging job in the US, except for the short flexibility between an engineering change and getting the change pushed through on the line.

    When it comes to export, I'm equally screwed. Until I signed up with Expeditors, there was no easy way for me to export my shipment around the world. So while I have customers in the UK, EU, and NZ/AU areas, for the longest time I had to resort to USPS Priority mail to ship them stuff, and priority mail rates just went up. Surface parcel service was discontinued a few years ago during budget cuts, so unless you are a bonded importer / exporter, you really have no option of doing a low cost export. Meanwhile, I paid US$20.00 for a batch of parts for 2 day shipping for a crate of timing belt pulleys from Shanghai to Hong Kong. There are so many Chinese logistics company these days that shipping is incredibly cheap to move things around in China.

    People don't realize that the world is getting a lot smaller these days. The other day a vendor returned an email quotation - 5 weeks after initial RFQ. I had already paid someone else and landed parts in that amount of time. A supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link and it seems like for small businesses there are just no good options for manufacturing.

    -=- Terence

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Lehk228 ( 705449 )
      so you have to pay duties on imported parts for manufacturing, but finished products for sale you don't?

      that's the most backwards stupid shit i have ever heard in my life. penalize companies making stuff here and reward companies doing all of their manufacturing overseas.
    • A supply chain is only as strong as its weakest link

      Interesting insight.

    • by TopSpin ( 753 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @08:16PM (#43041001) Journal

      I file an individual HTS classification for each line item

      The HTS is a fascinating bit of work. For people that don't know, the Harmonized Tariff Schedule [usitc.gov] is a US government published document that classifies just about every conceivable good and assigns tariffs, duties, etc. It is huge and is now only published in electronic form.

      As the parent wrote, most finished goods in the HTS are 0% tariff. There are many things in the HTS with tariffs, but if it's a finished good it is usually exempt from any cost whatsoever. Some exceptions include small arms and autos; the UAW negotiated a 25% domestic value-add requirement in the '80s if foreign manufacturers wish to avoid tariffs. That one requirement is the sole reason that all auto manufacturing hasn't evacuated the US. Today there are dozens of foreign owned auto plants in the southern US writing paychecks to thousands of US workers because of that law.

      No other nation is as import friendly as the US. Unless your nation has imams and muftis actively operating uranium isotope centrifuges in a bunker somewhere then you too can export to the US tariff free. You can wreck the environment to whatever degree you wish, abuse, neglect or contaminate however many people you want and it won't even slow down your goods as they get whisked into the US.

      That's what domestic manufacturers and the US working class have to compete with for 80% of all finished goods in the US.

    • by characterZer0 ( 138196 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @09:01PM (#43041331)

      You should look into setting up a Foreign Trade Zone. That would let you bring stuff in without paying duty, do the assembly and kitting locally, and then paying duty on the finished product instead of what you imported.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      "On top of all this, I currently import a bunch of motors, pulleys, bearings for my 3D printer kits, US customs requires that I file an individual HTS classification for each line item, and taxes me individually. I then pay my old coworker's kid $20/hr, which is a princely sum for a 14 year old girl, to do my packaging and kitting. However, If I paid some guys overseas $10.00 a day to do the same job, I can declare my imported goods as "construction toy set" and avoid paying import taxes all-together. There

  • Vertical Integration (Score:4, Interesting)

    by pubwvj ( 1045960 ) on Thursday February 28, 2013 @07:47PM (#43040811)

    The trick is vertical in-house integration. That is what our family has done with our businesses. The more we do in-house the more control we have the lower the costs and the more money stays in our pocket. This gives us better resilience for surviving and even thriving through economic downturns. Own the tools of manufacturing as much as possible.

    • Bingo. Works for you, works for SpaceX, works for a few others. Vertical integration is almost a necessity for a US manufacturing business, just because of all the silliness described in detail by Silicon_Knight/Terrence.

  • What the hell is all this crap I keep hearing about "investors?" Have they ever heard of a long or a bank? My company's credit SUCKS and we just financed $150,000 worth of equipment from Wells Fargo and another $30,000 from GE Capital. Either you have actual investors as in stock holders and then the money you need is just there (in theory) or you're private and then just get a loan. That's what banks do, they give loans. If you're going after some venture capitalist, it's because your idea sucked and
    • That's what banks do, they give loans. If you're going after some venture capitalist, it's because your idea sucked and your company has no history.

      Sure - if you have collateral. (That's why your company with sucky credit was able to finance the purchase of equipment.) But businesses in the growth phase need money for a whole host of things that can't be collateral... operating capital so you can move to bigger premises and hire more people, raw materials, medium and long term cash infusions to keep th

  • That's what they're good at.
    Export it a lot too.

    --
      There's no programming around corruption

  • A Great Wall, one might say.

    DISCLAIMER: In keeping with Slashdot tradition, I didn't actually read the article.

  • This comes up in Apple/Foxconn/iPhone post all the time, but one fact of manufacturing in China is the sheer number of employees they can throw at a job. In one instance Apple made a last minute design change... Foxconn pulled 8,000 workers (already employed, trained, etc) in the plant OVERNIGHT to start refitting Apple's product. There are very few manufacturing operations that big in the US... Automakers stopped making thing that big decades ago. It would be difficult to even ASSEMBLE workers, training,

  • So no one in the US cares, the plan is to pump the value up before you actually have to sell any product. Then sell the company for so much profit that it takes the next 50 years to pay off the debt. That way a bunch of leaches can skim out all the profits without having to do any actual work.

    It was all over for American business when the banksters decided that it was more profitable to take over well run companies with large investments that were only paying back at a few percent and sell the whole thing o

  • by MtViewGuy ( 197597 ) on Friday March 01, 2013 @01:24AM (#43042847)

    The US income tax code based on Title 26, the Internal Revenue Code, actually discourages savings and capital investment in the USA. I mean, look at what is wrong with our tax code now:

    1. 30,000 tax lobbyists--HALF the lobbyists in Washington, DC--fighting for every scrap of a tax loophole. And you get political corruption on a huge scale over this.
      2. The result is a tax code so complex that it makes James Joyce's "Finnegans Wake" almost easy to read in comparison. Even the IRS can't figure out much of the tax code!
      3. The sheer complexity means exorbitant yearly compliance costs, estimated by some economists to be around US$430 BILLION per year in 2012 (and climbing fast in each subsequent year).
      4. It also encourages the outsourcing of millions of jobs, thousands of factories, and hundreds of corporate headquarters for tax avoidance reasons.
      5. It results in (by some estimates) around US$15 TRILLION on American-owned liquid assets sitting in "offshore financial centers" and other foreign banks for tax avoidance reasons (care to explain all those "banks" in the Cayman Islands, Bahamas, British Virgin Islands, and so on?).
      6. Government uses the tax code as a political instrument to favor or punish political constituencies as little as ONE taxpaying entity.
      7. Because the IRS needs to know intimate details of personal and business financial records in tax return filings, there are potentially serious issues with invasion of privacy.
      8. The IRS assumes you're guilty of tax evasion, and you end up having less rights than most common criminals!

    This is both economic and political insanity, and explains why Apple just about builds all of its product line from Chinese suppliers. Maybe it's time to seriously look at unprecedented income tax reform such as the no-loophole flat tax Steve Forbes proposed in 1996 or the FairTax income tax replacement proposal (H.R. 25/S. 122) to finally make business income taxation extremely business-friendly so it encourages businesses to set up or expand operations in the USA.

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