US Manufacturing Output Larger than UK Economy

So much for the anti-China league’s endless fretting over American manufacturing jobs. Mark Perry‘s take:

According to the Federal Reserve, the value of U.S. manufacturing output in 2008 was $2.946 trillion, measured in 2000 dollars. Converted to 2008 dollars (link), that would be about $3.7 trillion, and the chart above shows how the U.S. manufacturing sector compares to the entire output, or GDP, of the top five largest economies in the world in 2008 (data): Japan ($4.9 trillion), China ($4.3T), Germany ($3.7T), U.K. ($2.7T) and Italy ($2.3T).

Bottom Line: If the U.S. manufacturing sector were a separate country, it would be tied with Germany as the world’s third largest economy. It would also be larger than the entire economies of India and Russia combined. As much as we hear about the “demise of U.S. manufacturing,” and how we are a country that “doesn’t produce anything anymore,” and how we have “outsourced our production to China,” the U.S. manufacturing sector is alive and well, and the U.S. is still the largest manufacturer in the world.

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