The U.S. Manufacturing Recovery: Uptick or Renaissance?

The notable rebound of U.S. manufacturing activity following the Great Recession has raised the question of whether the sector might be experiencing a renaissance. Using panel regressions, we find that a depreciating real exchange rate, an increasing spread in natural gas prices between the United States and other G-7 countries, and in particular decreasing unit labor costs have had a positive impact on U.S. manufacturing production. While we find it unlikely for manufacturing to become a main engine of growth in the United States, we find that U.S. manufacturing exports could provide nonnegligible growth opportunities going forward.
Publication date: February 2014
ISBN: 9781484301821
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Economics- Macroeconomics , Economics / General , International - Economics , U , S , manufacturing sector , durable and nondurable subsectors , Global Financial Crisis , shale gas , unit labor cost , exchange rate , growth

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