quote:
Originally posted by Andy Hummell:
One of the factors that often gets overlooked in discussions of American vs. Asian manufacturing is the costs of compliance. In the U.S., manufacturing companies have to pay a small army of people to make sure they are in compliance with the mountains of laws and regulations concerning employment issues, insurance issues, tax issues, environmental issues, etc.
Andy
Andy hit the nail on the head. A business partner and I investigated the possibilities of starting manufacture of toy products and even with favorable terms for the premises being offered, the amount of regulations defeated us in the end, we couldn't have raised enough startup capital to meet all the standards some of which are really stupid and quite unjustifiable.
Just one example. An ordinary household refrigerator if used for a business, though just as an employee benefit to keep their lunches in, must be inspected annually by the Fire Department and the Health Department for which, of course, you get charged! Fifty bucks here, fifty bucks there, before long you're talking real money.
However it was probably all for the best because not long afterward one of our major steel suppliers informed us they were being, in their words 'driven out of business by the cost of meeting the new regulations' and the extra cost of obtaining it from further away would have been the straw that broke the camels back. The profit margin was never all that much anyway.
That's just for maybe four men and a boy in a small shop, what it would be like for a major manufacturer one dreads to think. On the other hand, look at what the coal mining industry gets up to in West Virginia, what, if any, rules and regulations are hampering them? That's why they were imposed in an attempt to prevent turning America into a toxic dump.
We will HAVE to get back to manufacturing in this country but the transition to an entirely different approach, retooling everything from the supply side through manufacturing and distribution is a long and painful process.