Manufacturing Month: Inside America’s New Manufacturing Boom
Dr. Heather Evans is ITA’s Deputy Assistant Secretary for Manufacturing.
This is the third piece in a blog series about the 2023 National Export Strategy, a government-wide strategic plan to support American businesses through trade promotion activities.
This post contains external links. Please review our external linking policy.
If assembly lines and conveyor belts are the first images that come to mind when you think of manufacturing, look closer. Today’s world-class U.S. manufacturing workforce has come a long way from the Industrial Revolution, adding innovative tools to its toolkit including 3D printing, robotics and automation, artificial intelligence, and other powerful digital technologies. It’s also a sector no longer dominated by big factories—small and medium-sized enterprises are major players in creating next generation products across all industry sectors, from automotives and aerospace to pharmaceuticals and semiconductors and supercomputers.
Recommended by LinkedIn
The United States’ rapid expansion, research, and innovation in these technologies is what President Biden calls a “new manufacturing boom,” led by the hardworking Americans whose work serves as the backbone of our economy. As Deputy Assistant Secretary for Manufacturing, I am privileged to witness this boom with my own eyes—from meeting with U.S. companies developing the next generation of aerospace technology at the Paris Air Show, to seeing digital transformation research prototypes at the Manufacturing USA Institute in Chicago, and touring the new wave of high-tech construction equipment on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
Here are three perspectives about how investments from the U.S. public and private sector, and foreign direct investment (FDI) from global companies, are supporting this boom:
From every angle, U.S. manufacturing is a powerhouse of innovation, a constant driver of economic growth, and a consistent source of skilled jobs of the future. Through the new National Export Strategy, the U.S. government is united in strengthening our support for our manufacturing industry through trade finance programs, export counseling services, promoting acceptance of international standards, and more. October is Manufacturing Month, so please join me in thanking the American manufacturing workforce for leading us into the 21st century global economy.