December 15, 2012
Scott Paul: Follow up political 'jobs' ads with real jobs
Page 2 of 2
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We can do plenty. Here are a few steps the incoming Congress can take to support America's businesses and workers:

  • Give American businesses new tools to counter China's currency manipulation, industrial subsidies, intellectual property theft and barriers to market access. Get tough on trade cheats.
  • Apply "buy America" provisions to all federal spending so domestic firms get the first shot at procurement contracts. If American businesses are capable and competitive, this one is a no-brainer.
  • Condition federal loan guarantees for energy projects on the use of homegrown supply chains for construction. The recent boom in American energy production can and should be a vehicle to put more homegrown firms to work.
  • Dedicate more federal education funding for technical skills programs to address looming worker shortages in the manufacturing sector. Make sure we've got a class of engineers and tradesmen to fuel the next surge of industrial innovation in this country.
  • Ensure the benefits of tax reform go to companies that make things in America, not to Wall Street banks or retailers who don't really face global competition.
  • In short: Establish a concerted national policy to restore America's manufacturing base and the good jobs that come with it.

    This sector remains vital. Talk of reshoring is on the rise, the rescue of the auto industry was a success, and the economy has added 500,000 manufacturing jobs since 2010.

    And that momentum is precisely why we shouldn't stop now. Politicians had the wisdom to highlight these issues on the campaign trail. Now, they need to follow through on their promises to fight for American jobs and hold trading partners like China accountable when they cheat on their agreements.

    They talked the talk. Now let's see them walk the walk. To Washington, I say: America is watching. So don't allow an opportunity to revitalize American manufacturing to go to waste.

    Paul is executive director of the Alliance for American Manufacturing.

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