America doubling down on the past — again


The United States is doubling down on yesterday’s manufacturing strategy at the very moment the world is racing toward tomorrow.

That is the core flaw in the manufacturing approach associated with Donald Trump. It mirrors his energy policy: just as he has leaned into fossil fuels while the global economy pivots toward clean energy, his manufacturing vision leans toward reviving legacy industries while the rest of the world builds the future.

This is not a question of whether manufacturing matters. It does. Deeply. The question is what kind of manufacturing the United States should lead — and what kind it should let go.

Right now, we are answering that question poorly.

The current approach is built around tariffs, protection, and the idea that we can broadly “bring manufacturing back.” It sounds strong. It polls well. But it misunderstands how modern manufacturing actually works.

Manufacturing is no longer a single, national activity. It is a global system. Supply chains stretch across continents. Components cross borders multiple times before final assembly. Labor, capital, and expertise are distributed based on cost, capability, and specialization.

Trying to pull all of that back within U.S. borders is not strategy. It is nostalgia. And nostalgia is not a growth plan.

The real question is not whether something is made in America. It is what is made in America.

The United States should be the global leader in:

semiconductors

advanced materials

precision manufacturing

AI-enabled production

clean and high-tech industrial systems

These are the industries where:

productivity is highest

wages are highest

environmental impact is lowest

strategic leverage is greatest

These are the factories where workers earn $100,000 a year — not because of protection, but because of skill, technology, and value creation.

That is the future of manufacturing. And that is where the United States should dominate.

At the same time, we need to be honest about what doesn’t belong at the center of U.S. manufacturing strategy.

Labor-intensive, low-margin production — textiles, basic assembly, commodity goods — will continue to migrate to regions with lower labor costs. That is not failure. That is how global economics works.

The goal is not to win every factory. The goal is to win the most important factories.

A serious manufacturing policy would make that distinction clearly and unapologetically.

While the U.S. debates tariffs, China is building capacity.

It is scaling

solar panels

wind turbines

batteries

electric vehicles.

In other words, China is manufacturing the infrastructure of the future global economy.

The risk is not just environmental. It is strategic and economic obsolescence.

If the United States focuses on protecting legacy industries while China dominates next-generation ones, we are not competing — we are conceding.

There is one clear exception to all of this: national security.

Certain industries must be anchored domestically: defense systems, critical infrastructure components, advanced chips and essential medical supplies

In these areas, resilience matters more than efficiency. Redundancy matters more than cost.

But outside of those domains, the goal should not be blanket reshoring. It should be strategic leadership.

The United States faces a simple but consequential choice:

We can try to rebuild the past — protecting industries that are declining globally, raising costs at home, and falling behind in the sectors that will define the next century.

Or we can build the future — investing in advanced manufacturing, aligning education with high-skill production, and competing where it actually matters.

Right now, we are leaning toward the first path.

Because in both energy and manufacturing, the same pattern is emerging: doubling down on what used to work, while the rest of the world moves on.

And in a global economy that rewards innovation, speed, and scale, that is not just a missed opportunity.

It is a strategic mistake.

Ed Gaskin is Executive Director of Greater Grove Hall Main Streets and founder of Sunday Celebrations

TOPSHOT - US President Donald Trump (C) shows his signature on the "Big Beautiful Bill Act" at the White House in Washington, DC, on July 4, 2025. US President Donald Trump signed his flagship tax and spending bill on July 4 in a pomp-laden Independence Day ceremony featuring fireworks and a flypast by the type of stealth bomber that bombed Iran. Trump pushed Republican lawmakers to get his unpopular "One Big Beautiful Bill" through a reluctant Congress in time for him to sign it into law on the US national holiday -- and they did so with a day to spare Thursday. (Photo by Brendan SMIALOWSKI / POOL / AFP) (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)President Donald Trump shows his signature on the “Big Beautiful Bill Act” at the White House in Washington, DC, last year. (Photo by BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/POOL/AFP via Getty Images)

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