Manufacturing will always exist. It just depends on which country keeps power. Go get a job.
I'm not really responding to this per se. Just wanted to let you know, that the way I worded my previous response might have come across a bit more aggressive than I actually intended. I was thinking about that before I even noticed the new post.
But I do agree that we need to bring manufacturing back. I also acknowledge that some of it has been doing just that. It's going to take time. Many people just are impatient, and want a quick fix. That's not going to happen. But it can happen over time, like it has been.
NAFTA was a mistake. It's one issue where I vehemently disagreed with Bill Clinton. There's another big one too, but I would have to look up the name of the Act. That second one actually had a lot to do with the housing bubble and the bank collapse. And it got pushed through during the Clinton Admin.
Personally, I favor tariffs. I just understand that the situation is more complicated than most people realize.
But to get back on topic...
I do question how significant the tax cuts really are when it comes to small businesses. That's because with so much of the economy dependent upon services, food, and retail, witnessing a shift towards bigger business in these areas has a major impact on local economies.
For instance, Stop & Shop used to be a regional supermarket brand. Now it's part of an international Dutch conglomerate. It pays low wages. It tends to only hire part-time. It is a Union shop, but most employees receive very little benefit or representation from the Union despite having to pay union dues from their meager paychecks. As a result, the brand has suffered for it. The store is no longer as good as it once was. I refuse to shop there because other stores are better in price, service, and quality....and those other stores are sometimes still regional rather than national or international brands. But even those regional brands keep expanding, building bigger stores, and get bought up by larger brands, all the while forcing smaller local supermarkets out. Thus more and more stores are paying lower wages, have higher staff turnover, and sending more cash and revenue out of the local area, region, and increasingly out of the country.
It's the same thing happening with pharmacies, bookstores, hardware stores, electronics stores, healthcare, restaurants, and more. It's even happened with the food vendors (that supply the restaurants) and electrical supply chains. It's far-reaching here which is why many municipalities are struggling with their budgets. Small local businesses tend to keep more money inside the local economy rather than sending it elsewhere to some corporate HQ in another country or state. They may have some dependence on bigger businesses, such as for goods, but local businesses tend to reinvest their profits at a local level rather than abroad.