Home WebMail Saturday, November 2, 2024, 02:32 AM | Calgary | -1.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Posted: 2018-01-14T03:47:54Z | Updated: 2018-01-14T03:47:54Z A Startling Shift in Economic Demographics | HuffPost

A Startling Shift in Economic Demographics

A Startling Shift in Economic Demographics
This post was published on the now-closed HuffPost Contributor platform. Contributors control their own work and posted freely to our site. If you need to flag this entry as abusive, send us an email.

It was many decades ago when word first reached faraway Tokyo, Japan, that if they were ever seriously considering putting down permanent manufacturing roots in the U.S., they would be well advised to place them in the American South.

Not only was the U.S. an unbelievably fertile marketindeed, we invented mega-consumerismbut because the former CSA (Confederate States of America) was conspicuously and stridently opposed to collectivism, government regulation, and labor unions, the American South would be the perfect place to establish, well, an industrial empire.

And that more or less marked the beginning GIM (the Great Industrial Migration). Following the Civil War, when those diehard Johnny Rebs uttered the famous words, The South shall rise again! they werent lying. It has not only risen, it continues to rise.

As for organized labor lamenting the loss of manufacturing jobs to foreign countries, its true. We have lost our manufacturing core. In the parlance of the day, it has been hollowed out. But theres still meaningful growth in the manufacturing sector. The only drawback is that you have to live south of the Mason-Dixon line to benefit from it.

In 2009, when the federal government (with President Barack Obama leading the charge) decided to bail out the auto industrynotably General Motorsby lending them $80 billion, the Republican Party (with Mitt Romney leading the charge) insisted that this was none of the governments business, and that, as sad and distressing as it may be, Americas citizens were obliged to stand back quietly and watch GM go bankrupt.

The anti-bailout charge in Congress was led by the formidable Alabama Senator, Richard Shelby. Although Shelby, on the Senate floor, televised on C-SPAN, registered his objections in classic laissez-faire economic rhetoric (It clearly is not the role of the federal government to prop up failing businesses!), he wasnt motivated by ideology. Rather, he was motivated by self-interest. By the lure of self-improvement. By the demands of self-preservation. By the reality of GIM.

Brutal as it seems, its no exaggeration to say that every current House and Senate member in Dixie, for purely economic reasons, wishes to see Detroit destroyed. The way they view the economic landscape, because the future of the American auto industry will eventually and inevitably reside in the Deep South, theres really no point in postponing it.

Just as Greece was the cradle of Western Civilization, Detroit was the epicenter and impetus of what became Americas storied and on-going love affair with cars. And clinging to our Greek analogy, its fair to say that the good people of Alabama would like nothing better than to see present-day Detroit reduced to same level of insignificance as present-day Greece.

Its already happening. A couple weeks ago it was announced that a $1.6 billion Toyota-Mazda auto plant will be built on a 2,500 acre site in Huntsville, Alabama. This Huntsville facility is expected to create at least 4,000 jobs, and inject millions of dollars into the local economy. Not just new jobs, but good jobsnon-union jobs that pay close enough to union wages and offer close enough to union benefits to keep the unions out.

By last count, there were already more than 40 auto plants in Dixieincluding assembly facilities, parts factories, and auxiliary supportwith more to come. The communities that successfully lured these automakers were able to do so by offering them the moon. Enormous tax breaks, free services, re-routing railroad tracks to accommodate shipping, providing free recruiting of workers, and even agreeing to underwrite their training. Whos going to turn down that offer?

Of course, Donald Trump has sought to take credit for this decision, boasting that it was his economic policies that lured Toyota-Mazda to this country, which is pure nonsense. Japan couldnt have cared less who was president, because this irrevocable migration South transcends presidential politics. Auto makers have been quietly setting up shop down there well before Trump even divorced his second wife.

They are here, and more are on the way. Eventually, the GIM wont even be called that anymore, because it will no longer be a phenomenon worth mentioning. Sadly, there will come a day when Detroit speaks of Henry Ford and Walter Reuther with the same sense of nostalgia and lost glory that the Greeks reserve for Plato.

Your Support Has Never Been More Critical

Other news outlets have retreated behind paywalls. At HuffPost, we believe journalism should be free for everyone.

Would you help us provide essential information to our readers during this critical time? We can't do it without you.

Support HuffPost