Key Findings
- Ninety percent of executives say that high-tech sectors will drive the future of US-based manufacturing: Green tech (selected by 43% of respondents), energy (42%), high-tech (42%) and pharma/biotech (37%) are seen as the industry sectors with the greatest opportunity for growth over the next three years. This is supported by respondents’ view that the US’s competitive advantage lies in its ability to offer high levels of security for intellectual property and being able to meet the needs of high-tech sectors, selected by one-third of respondents each.
- Manufacturing executives see innovation in products and processes as more valuable to the long-term competitiveness of US manufacturing than cost-cutting: While 62% of respondents see cost-cutting boosting US-based manufacturing in the near term, 90% identify innovation as the key to long-term success. The President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology agrees, arguing in its June 2011 report that the country needs “a fertile environment for innovation” to remain a global leader.
- When asked what the government can do, executives value investment in STEM education over corporate tax cuts. Complementing the long-term innovation-focused outlook of the survey respondents, 38% of executives consider government investment in STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education as second only to tax incentives – selected by 51% of respondents – in supporting the US as a manufacturing destination. Corporate tax cuts come in third, selected by 34% of respondents. Access to highly skilled workers was also cited as the single most critical factor in determining a country’s manufacturing competitiveness in the June 2010 Deloitte Global Manufacturing Competitiveness Index.
- Only 18% of respondents think that the government is providing a supportive regulatory environment for the manufacturing industry: Forty-six percent of respondents have a negative or very negative attitude towards the current regulatory environment’s ability to support growth in US manufacturing, while 36% are ambivalent. But they believe the government can help them regain their competitive advantage through tax incentives, better education and a regulatory environment that doesn’t penalize US manufacturers. “Without government support, manufacturing jobs will go elsewhere,” says Jay Knoll, president of Energy Conversion Devices (ECD), a solar thin film manufacturer in Michigan. “We need advantages to scaling production in our own country.”