Sam Patterson's Blog 10月02日
美国制造业实力强劲,无需恐慌
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尽管中国制造业总量超过美国,但美国人均产出远超中国。美国仍是制造业强国,无需因中国崛起而恐慌。贸易战无助于解决根本不存在的危机,应理性看待制造业发展。

📊 中国制造业总量虽大,但人口是美国的四倍,人均产出远低于美国,美国制造业效率更高。

🏭 美国制造业仍具优势,拥有先进技术和更高生产力,是全球制造业的重要力量。

🤝 贸易战无助于解决问题,理性看待国际分工与竞争,避免经济自我伤害。

🎯 美国应专注于提升自身效率和创新,而非盲目采取贸易保护主义措施。

📈 全球制造业发展呈现多元化格局,各国各有优势,合作共赢优于单边对抗。

Summary

China manufactures more than the U.S.—but that’s because they have four times the population. When you look at per-person output, the U.S. is far more productive. There is no crisis. Tariffs won’t fix a problem that doesn’t exist.

The Non-Existent Crisis

We are told that America no longer produces anything, and that we’ve made a huge mistake by allowing China and other nations to become manufacturing powerhouses.

This is such a dire threat to America that the President claims emergency powers to unilaterally launch a trade war, hiking tariffs to levels not seen in nearly a century.

There are many problems with this approach, but the most glaring is that America is still a manufacturing powerhouse itself. In fact, it’s far more productive than China.

The Numbers

Let’s dig into why this misconception persists: raw numbers without context. It may be partially due to only looking at the total manufacturing output.

The World Bank data shows China at $4.6 trillion worth of manufacturing in 2023, and the US at $2.5 trillion in 2021. I’ll round China to $5 trillion to make the example even simpler.

That means China manufactures roughly twice as many goods as the US. That’s not just a lot in raw terms—China accounts for 31% of global manufacturing, while the US contributed only 16%.

So does China’s higher total output prove we’re falling behind? Not quite.

No, for a simple reason: China has ~1.4 billion people, and the US has ~350 million.

They have almost exactly four times our population, yet they only produce twice as much. This means that Americans manufacture twice as much as the Chinese, per person.

It’s difficult to conceive how our manufacturing superiority is a crisis.

An analogy: Bakeries

If you prefer analogies to dry numbers, let’s imagine that China and the US are two bakeries, one operating in a city and another in a small town.

The city supports a big bakery - it has 300 workers. Those three hundred workers produce 1,000 loaves of bread each day. Each city baker turns out about 3.3 loaves.

The small town has a population only one-quarter the size, and their bakery has only 70 workers. Despite having so few workers, they still produce half the output of the giant bakery, making 500 loaves a day. Each small town baker produces 7 loaves, double the productivity of their city counterparts.

Does the greater raw output of the city bakery threaten the small town bakery? That’s unlikely, since there’s demand for bread in both the city and town, as well as in other places. They’ve got better machinery and better bakers. They’ll be just fine.

Before launching a trade war, we should understand the numbers. America isn’t failing—we’re outperforming. Let’s not sabotage that with economic self-harm.

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美国制造业 中国制造业 贸易战 经济危机 人均产出
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