Trump Vs. Rexnord, Who Will Win?
Wisconsin could loom large in Trump’s effort to save manufacturing jobs.
This is how American companies move jobs out of the country.
Back in October the Milwaukee-based industrial supplier Rexnord Corp. called its 295 Indianapolis employees into meetings.
“They put cameras up last weekend, and they told us it was just for security reasons,” Don Zering, a 43-year Rexnord employee and union president told the Indianapolis Star. “We think they lied to us. It was because they knew they were going to close the plant” and wanted surveillance in place, he contended.
At the meetings, union officials were told about the plan to close the plant first, then workers, then Rexnord officials sent the employees home, clearing the plant.
Employees at Rexnord’s Indianapolis plant earned about $25 an hour, and the workers in Mexico, where the factory will move by June, are expected to earn $5 or less. The new operation will save the company more than $15 million in the first year and $350,000 annually after that. That will likely help increase earnings for Rexnord stockholders and for company CEO Todd A. Adams, who’s earned $15.6 million in compensation from 2012 to 2016. The displaced employees, meanwhile, will be asked to train their successors in order to receive a severance package, a Rexnord employee told The Guardian.
All of which is just one small example of how the wealth gap in America has mushroomed into the largest deficit in a century, with CEOs of companies making 331 times more than average workers.
But there’s a new sheriff in America, and President-elect Donald Trump reacted to Rexnord plans last week by tweeting this: “Rexnord of Indiana is moving to Mexico and rather viciously firing all of its 300 workers. This is happening all over our country. No more!”
That’s generated lots of media coverage, with Rexnord officials declining to respond to the media (including Urban Milwaukee) and probably hoping to quietly weather the storm. Trump’s recently-announced deal with the Carrier company, which resulted in the Indiana company reducing the number of jobs it would ship overseas by 850 in return for $7 million in tax breaks, has been criticized both by conservative Republicans like William Kristol and liberal Democrats like Bernie Sanders. So perhaps Trump will back off on Rexnord.
But probably no campaign promise was more critical to Trump’s electoral victory than his pledge to stop manufacturers from outsourcing jobs. A study ranking states by manufacturing’s share of total employment found Indiana was first with 16.8 percent of all jobs, Wisconsin second (16.3 percent), Iowa third (14 percent) and Michigan fourth (13.5 percent). Trump won all four states, which put him over the top in an election where he lost the popular vote by nearly three million.
In short, it’s no coincidence that the first test of Trump’s promise to stop manufacturers from outsourcing jobs was in Indiana and the second involved a Wisconsin company. These two states have long been the leaders in manufacturing employment, and have been hit hard. Since 2000, Indiana has lost 150,000 manufacturing jobs, while Wisconsin has bled an estimated 90,000 factory jobs.
Three of the nations’ top 10 congressional districts in the percent of manufacturing employees are in Wisconsin, the 6th, 8th and 5th districts. Trump won all three.
Candidate Trump promised his administration would slap a 35 percent import tariff on goods made by American manufacturers that moved jobs offshore. But House Republican leaders have already indicated they are unlikely to support such a proposal. And as economists have noted, a tariff hike aimed only at imports from an American-held company would leave a foreign-held company making similar products with a big competitive advantage. America’s economy would be punished.
But with Trump, you never know how serious he is about that (or any) proposal. Maybe the approach he used with Carrier is what he’ll move toward. That could get pretty pricey. One study found the total of jobs outsourced just to China from 2001-2013 was 3.2 million. At the rate of $7 million in tax breaks to save 850 jobs, it would have cost more than $26 billion to save those 3.2 million jobs.
And if you were to spend $26 billion to boost the American economy, would you really want to invest it in manufacturing jobs that have been declining in most developed countries since the early 1990s? Imagine spending that instead to make America the leader in all kinds of cutting edge industries, including alternative energy.
Democrats, meanwhile, have proposed different ideas to try to help American workers and reduce the wealth gap: Hike the minimum wage (Trump opposes), increase the income tax on the richest Americans (Trump intends to slash it) and increase the earned income tax and child care deductions (Trump appears to favor this but it’s unlikely the Republican Congress would) and retraining of American workers (Trump has said little).
Democrats also favor significant federal spending to fix bridges, highways and other crumbling infrastructure and thereby create jobs. Trump supports an infrastructure program, but is considering an approach where federal tax credits could be used to create a windfall for private investors. Meanwhile, Democratic senators like Tammy Baldwin have called on Trump and Republicans to support a “Buy America” provision in any infrastructure bills, rather than using foreign suppliers for steel and other products, and that has fallen on deaf ears.
The best guess is that Trump will score some occasional victories with Carrier-like deals that he will publicize as big victories, even as the wealth gap in America increases. But whatever the policies he ultimately pursues, we are likely to see the greatest impact — or lack of it — in heavy manufacturing states like Wisconsin. If he can’t reverse the decline of factory jobs in Wisconsin, Trump probably won’t succeed nationally.
Murphy's Law
-
National Media Discovers Mayor Johnson
Jul 16th, 2024 by Bruce Murphy -
Milwaukee Arts Groups in Big Trouble
Jul 10th, 2024 by Bruce Murphy -
The Plague of Rising Health Care Costs
Jul 8th, 2024 by Bruce Murphy
It’s been remarkable to watch conservatives redefine the free market. Now it means the POTUS should strong-arm companies and pick winners and losers. If Obama had done to Carrier what Trump did, conservative outrage would be enormous, to say the least.
But Obama did his own Carrier style deal. He just wasn’t willing to brag about it: http://www.politico.com/agenda/story/2016/12/obama-pennsylvania-refinery-trump-carrier-000255
Obama isn’t a Republican who believes that the almighty free market should be left alone no matter what.
Excuse me: you mean that the CEO MADE $15.6 million in compensation. As evidenced by this shift, he didn’t earn it. He took it.
Vince, news flash Trump is not a Conservative. Though it seems the progressives despise him so much that he is left with Speaker Ryan and Company. One of Trumps shrewdest moves as a novice politician was to agree with the Democrats that Republicans were a problem. How was Hillary suppose to play the Paul Ryan commercial of granny being pushed off a cliff over Medicare when Trump simply states I agree.
Jason, news flash, I didn’t call Trump a conservative. Please read all posts carefully before you reply. Conservatives who profess to love an unfettered free market are defending what Trump did. That is what I stated above. Not that Trump is a conservative.
Jason Reading is fundamental. Reading comprehension even more so you should do so more often.
I live in Indianapolis, and my joke on the locals is to tell them that Rexnord originally brought those jobs to Indy to screw the Milwaukeeans that wanted decent pay; so Indy isn’t anything but Milwaukee’s Mexico…
What really strikes me as absurd is that Trump didn’t do squat but put Indiana residents on the hoof for some serious $$$$$ and still that isn’t enough to save the other Carrier jobs that will still be going to Mexico. Robespierre may yet be a model for the 21st century. Maybe CEO Todd A. Adams can be the trendsetter. I’ll be curious if what’s left of the Tea Party will oust any politico that votes against the 35% tariff.
Trump’s promises to bring back coal mining jobs and manufacturing employment for people the reactionaries derided as “the blue collar aristocracy” are hollow as the words of THE WIZZARD OF OZ when that con-man implored his audience to refrain from looking behind the curtain. Obama reduced the unemployment rate substantially during his tenure. The limited stimulus package afforded him by a reactionary Congress rescued us from the Cheney/Bush “Great Recession.”