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December 27, 2006

An article in today's New York Times reports on arguments about the link between innovation and manufacturing:

Import penetration, as it is called, worried economists and policymakers when it first became noticeable 20 years ago. Many considered factory production a crucial component of the nation’s wealth and power. As imports gained ground, however, that view changed; the experts shifted the emphasis from production to design and innovation. Let others produce what Americans think up.

Or as Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Economy.com, put it: “We want people who can design iPods, not make them.” ...

But over the long run, can invention and design be separated from production? That question is rarely asked today. The debate instead centers on the loss of well-paying factory jobs and on the swelling trade deficit in manufactured goods. When the linkage does come up, the answer is surprisingly affirmative: Yes, invention and production are intertwined.

“Most innovation does not come from some disembodied laboratory,” said Stephen S. Cohen, co-director of the Berkeley Roundtable on the International Economy at the University of California, Berkeley. “In order to innovate in what you make, you have to be pretty good at making it — and we are losing that ability.”...

Alan Tonelson, a research fellow at the United States Business and Industry Council, argues that in this country, import penetration is rising faster in core industries like machine-tool building than it is in other countries. And these are the industries that are, or should be, centers of innovation and invention.

As I've argued before, Silicon Valley's greatness is based on a wellspring of manufacturing genius: Christophe Lecuyer contends in his book Making Silicon Valley that growing a native base of manufacturing intelligence was important to the Valley's rise than having lots of Ph.D.s.

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Originally posted by Alex Soojung-Kim Pang from IFTF's Future Now, remediated by yatta on Dec 27, 2006 at 2:49 AM


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