THIS IS AN ARCHIVED SITE
This site contains information from January 2009-December 2014. Click HERE to go the CURRENT commerce.gov website.

Economics and Statistics Administration Report Show Value of New Manufacuring Jobs

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, August 22, 2013
CONTACT ESA OFFICE OF PUBLIC AFFAIRS
202-482-5042

The U.S. Commerce Department’s Economics and Statistics Administration (ESA) today released a new report entitled The Earnings of New Hires in Manufacturing, which confirms that manufacturing jobs created in recent years are indeed good jobs. U.S. Secretary of Commerce Penny Pritzker mentioned the report’s findings during a speech on the importance of American manufacturing at Walmart’s first-ever U.S. Manufacturing Summit in Orlando, Fla., earlier today.

The report found that new hires in manufacturing had 38 percent greater monthly earnings than new hires in other sectors at the end of 2011 (the latest data available). The monthly earnings premium for the manufacturing workforce as a whole, including both new hires and incumbents, was 25 percent. This earnings premium results from both greater hourly earnings and from more hours of work per month. 

“Today’s ESA report on manufacturing provides important evidence that new manufacturing jobs are, in general, better paying jobs than positions in other sectors,” said Secretary Pritzker. “This report provides further validation that we need to continue our strong efforts to spur American manufacturing, which represents a vital part of our nation’s economic growth.”

This new report, which is based on the U.S. Census Bureau’s rich and innovative Quarterly Workforce Indicators (QWI) data set, shows the following:

  • New hires in manufacturing continue to enjoy higher monthly earnings relative to new hires in non-manufacturing industries.  This premium peaked during the recession but has returned to near its pre-recession average; 
  • At the end of 2011, the ratio of new hire earnings to incumbent earnings was about 8 percentage points higher in manufacturing than in other industries;
  • For at least the last decade, the earnings of new hires relative to incumbents have been consistently higher in manufacturing; and
  • Since the recession began, real average earnings for new hires in manufacturing grew 3.5 percent.  Over the same time period, real earnings for hires in other industries were flat.

The complete report can be found at: http://www.esa.doc.gov/Reports/earnings-new-hires-manufacturing.