Can America Compete?

Can America Compete? by Robert Lawrence, published by Brookings Institution Press on May 1, 1984, is a detailed examination of the performance of U.S. manufacturing within a historical and global context. This edition spans 171 pages and is presented in English. The book argues that, contrary to prevailing fears, international trade competition has not led to the deindustrialization of America. It highlights that during the 1970s, the U.S. manufacturing sector performed relatively well compared to other industrial nations, with many issues in the early 1980s attributed to domestic recession and a strong U.S. dollar.
Readers will find a thorough analysis of long-term trends in U.S. manufacturing, including employment, capital formation, and research and development expenditures. The author addresses common misconceptions regarding the decline in manufacturing employment and emphasizes that the U.S. maintains a comparative advantage in high-technology products. Additionally, the book explores manufacturing trade flows and their determinants, while also discussing various policy options for the United States, such as laissez-faire approaches and new industrial policies aimed at improving trade policy and addressing market failures.
Official synopsis Publisher
An examination of the performance of U.S. manufacturing in historical and global perspective indicates that, contrary to recent fears, international trade competition has not induced the deindustrialization of America. During the 1970s the U.S. manufacturing sector fared relatively well compared to its counterparts in other industrual countries and its own post-war track record. Most of its problems in the early 1980s are linked to domestic recession and the strong U.S. dollar. A number of implicit assumptions in the current discussion about U.S. industrial performance are shown in this book to be inappropriatechanges in international trade are not the major reason for the declining share of manufacturing in U.S. employment: even though foreign productive capabilities are catching up with those of the United States, the U.S. comparative advantage in high-technology products has increased. The author looks at these and other issues and seeks to clarify some common misperceptions about U.S. manufacturing. He examines long-term trends and changes since 1973 in U.S. manufacturingemployment, capital formation, research and development expenditures, and output. He looks closely at manufacturing trade flows and their major determinants and at the role of trade in the U.S. manufacturing sector. The last part of the book addresses policy options for the United States, including laissez-faire, matching foreign subsidies, and new industrial policies. Changes in U.S. policies are suggested that might facilitate efficient structural trade adjustment, improve trade policy, and compensate for market failures.
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