Productivity

Is Outsourcing Skewing Labor Figures?

Government statistics can't account for 2 million workers. The Labor Department finds 18.5 million American workers in the manufacturing sector. The Census Bureau shows 20.5 million workers claiming to work in manufacturing. Who's right?

The answer may lie in the recent growth of outsourcing.

  • Many factory layoffs have really been outsourcings -- in which workers returned as vendors or contractors.

  • The Labor Department classifies temporary workers and many vendors as service-sector employees -- rather than lumping them into the manufacturing category.

  • Executives at the temporary-personnel firm, Manpower, Inc., estimate that they send out more than 100,000 blue-collar workers to manufacturing jobs each week.

  • A 1995 Labor Department study found that perhaps one-third of all temporaries work for manufacturers.

Government figures indicate there are somewhere between 400,000 and 840,000 temporary workers in factories this year.

These numbers indicate that manufacturers are generating lots of jobs. And at least part of the reason for the service sector's dismal productivity growth in recent years -- and manufacturers' impressive productivity performance -- is that the government is overcounting service workers and undercounting manufacturing workers.

Source: Kim Clark, "Manufacturing's Hidden Asset, "Temp Workers," Fortune, November 10, 1997.


Home | Support Us | All Issues | Social Security | Debate Central | Contact Us

Dallas Headquarters: 12770 Coit Rd., Suite 800 - Dallas, TX 75251-1339 - 972/386-6272 - Fax 972/386-0924
Washington Office: 601 Pennsylvania Ave. NW, Suite 900 South Building - Washington, DC 20004 - 202/220-3082 - Fax 202/220-3096
© 2001 NCPA