Manufacturing Advances

In the past, the United States was a manufacturing-based economy. However, due to the rising costs of technology and the effects of globalization, most manufacturing went overseas, even though certain segments within the manufacturing industry have remained in the United States, such as high-end production that requires specialized capabilities. Though shifts in politics and international security may lead to more manufacturing happening within the United States in the future, international partners will always be necessary to provide components for production. Globalization is a critical matter for international businesses. Read this chapter and focus on the trends in global business over the past few decades. Are these trends going to continue, or could we see changes as nations start to become more isolationist in an attempt to protect jobs?

Trends in Production and Operations Management

  • What key trends are affecting the way companies manage production and operations?

What trends will impact U.S. production and operations management both now and in the future? Manufacturing employment has added one million manufacturing factory jobs since the end of the great recession, up to a level of 12.5 million in December 2017. U.S. exports have quadrupled over the past 25 years, and the integration of technology into manufacturing processes has made U.S. manufacturers more competitive. These statistics portray a U.S. economy that is steaming ahead.

Yet rapid changes in technology and intense global competition – particularly from Asia – create anxiety about the future. Is technology replacing too many jobs? Or, with qualified workers predicted to be in short supply, is the increased reliance on technology imperative to the United States' ability to compete in a global marketplace? Will the United States lose its edge in the ongoing war for leadership in innovation? And what should it be doing to ensure that today's students are tomorrow's innovators and scientists?

Recent surveys show finding qualified workers continues to be a major concern facing U.S. industry today. If the United States is to maintain its competitive edge, more investment – both private and federal – is needed for science and research. And what about the crucial role of technology? These are some of the trends facing companies today that we will examine.

U.S. workers no longer compete simply against one another but also against workers in less-developed countries with lower wages and increasing access to modern technology and production techniques. This is particularly true for manufacturers who account for the bulk of U.S. exports and compete directly with most imports. A more integrated global economy with more import competition and more export opportunities offers both new challenges and new opportunities to the United States and its workforce. To maintain its position as the world's leading innovator, it is essential that the United States remain committed to innovation and the concerted development of a more highly educated and skilled workforce.


Source: OpenStax, https://courses.lumenlearning.com/suny-osintrobus/chapter/trends-in-production-and-operations-management/
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