Figure XX

It’s not technology killing manufacturing—employment was steady for 35 years between 1965 and 2000: Manufacturing employment and trade deficit with China, 1965–2015

Trade balance  Manufacturing employment
1965 0.00% 17051
1966 0.00% 17998
1967 0.00% 18025
1968 0.00% 18410
1969 0.00% 18485
1970 0.00% 17309
1971 0.00% 17202
1972 0.00% 18158
1973 0.00% 18820
1974 0.00% 17693
1975 0.00% 17140
1976 0.00% 17719
1977 0.00% 18531
1978 0.00% 19334
1979 0.00% 19301
1980 0.00% 18640
1981 0.00% 18223
1982 0.00% 16690
1983 0.00% 17551
1984 0.00% 18023
1985 0.00% 17693
1986 0.04% 17478
1987 0.06% 17809
1988 0.07% 18025
1989 0.11% 17881
1990 0.17% 17395
1991 0.21% 16916
1992 0.28% 16769
1993 0.33% 16815
1994 0.40% 17217
1995 0.44% 17231
1996 0.49% 17284
1997 0.58% 17588
1998 0.63% 17449
1999 0.71% 17280
2000 0.82% 17181
2001 0.78% 15711
2002 0.94% 14912
2003 1.08% 14300
2004 1.32% 14287
2005 1.54% 14193
2006 1.69% 14015
2007 1.79% 13746
2008 1.82% 12850
2009 1.57% 11475
2010 1.82% 11595
2011 1.90% 11802
2012 1.95% 11960
2013 1.91% 12086
2014 1.98% 12294
2015 2.04% 12320
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Note: Data on manufacturing employment are from Current Employment Statistics (CES) program of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). Data on Chinese trade balance are from the Census Bureau. As a share of GDP, the US/China trade balance was 0.00% in 1985 (first year of data availability). We assume this value holds for pre-1985 years as well.

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