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Industries The U.S. Has Lost To China: 24/7 Wall St.

24/7 Wall St.     First Posted: 01/26/2012 3:22 pm   Updated: 01/31/2012 11:18 am

From 24/7 Wall St.: Americans are used to the U.S. being the leader, or a top-ranked nation, in many areas. But in a number of industries and businesses, the U.S. has lost that first place, usually to China. While some, such as coal production, may not come as a surprise, other industries where the U.S. has lost market leadership might. 24/7 Wall St. looked at a large number of manufacturing, agricultural and financial businesses to find those in which China has surpassed the U.S.

Read: The Eight Industries the U.S Has Lost to China

For several years, economists have said that China's GDP growth indicates that its economy will pass that of the U.S. in the next two or three decades. China's GDP is measured at about $6.5 trillion, now second in the world. America's GDP is over $15.2 trillion, according to the International Monetary Fund. While China certainly has much catching up to do, the two countries' rate of GDP growth is also very different. Last year, China's economy expanded at more than 9 percent. America's GDP grew at a little better than 2 percent.

One reason that China continues to gain so rapidly on the U.S. is the high cost of American labor and manufacturing. In fact, U.S. manufacturing costs have risen so much that they are much higher than in any developed nation with factory capacity. This includes countries like China, Mexico and South Korea - places the U.S. and Japanese companies often contract to do their factory work. The labor price advantage has helped China become the largest steel producer in the world. China is also first place in car manufacturing.

Low labor costs are not the sole reason China has become the single largest provider of many goods. China's 1.3 billion citizens have become voracious consumers as workers in its manufacturing sector have grown the number of its middle class. China also has decided that it is often financially better to provide its own raw material for its factories -- items like cotton -- than it is to import such items from overseas.

24/7 Wall St. examined the manufacturing, agricultural and financial businesses in which China has surpassed the U.S. China likely will become the world's largest economy based on GDP. It certainly has shown that it has the capacity to advance on that position - one large industry at a time.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this post mistakenly listed China's population at 1.3 trillion. It is 1.3 billion.

Here are eight industries the U.S. has lost to China, according to 24/7 Wall St.:

8. Coal Production
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China production: 3.24 billion short tons produced in 2010
U.S. production: 985 million tons produced in 2010
U.S. position: 2nd

America led the world in coal production up until 1984, and it is now a distant second to China. According to the BP Statistical Review of World Energy, the U.S. produced just under 1 billion tons of coal in 2010. China produced more than three times that amount, generating 3.2 billion short tons. There has been exponential growth in the Chinese energy infrastructure in the past decade. Since 2005, American coal production has decreased slightly, while Chinese production has increased by nearly 38%. Despite the U.S.'s decline in coal production, it is still the world's second-largest producer, and combined, the two countries account for more than half of the world's total coal production.

Read more at 24/7 Wall St.
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From 24/7 Wall St.: Americans are used to the U.S. being the leader, or a top-ranked nation, in many areas. But in a number of industries and businesses, the U.S. has lost that first place, usually to...
From 24/7 Wall St.: Americans are used to the U.S. being the leader, or a top-ranked nation, in many areas. But in a number of industries and businesses, the U.S. has lost that first place, usually to...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
l monroe
I question authority.
10:19 AM on 02/07/2012
What do you expect for a slave labor economy? I don't wish to get into the crimes against workers there. The only industries that will survive are those who produce products under the cost of transportation.
09:46 AM on 01/31/2012
"China's 1.3 trillion citizens have become voracious consumers" Visible mistake, it's 1.3 Billion, please fix this.
George Ky
Old, white and liberal
05:22 PM on 01/30/2012
Let's face it, China uses very cheap or even slave labor. Do you really think that Chinese factory workers have any quality of life? The Teapublican want jobs back here but at the same low rates and no labor standards like in China. I hope the American voters aren't naive enough to let the American standard of living sink to a 3rd world level by voting Tea Bagger.
04:47 PM on 01/30/2012
One of the ones America is still leading - genetic engineering - is home to the biggest criminal in the business who sell the world one dangerous product after antoher and buys off politicians all over the planet to let them do it. Monsanto should not only be closed, it should be burned to the ground where ever it raises its poisonous, parasitic head.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
diverjay
The Depth of Liberal Hypocrisy is Beyond Fathom.
12:24 PM on 01/30/2012
We live in the Walmart generation. 8.5% unemployment rate, (11% in my state) and yet almost everything we buy comes from China. At some point we are going to have to decide. Do we want jobs or $10 coffee makers and $20 DVD players? I say it's time to bring the jobs home!
12:28 PM on 01/31/2012
In order to do that we need to lower corporate taxes; but that's simple to do. Lower corporate taxes and make the companies like GE who don't pay ANY taxes pay some taxes. That way it encourages those companies to come back home. I would like to see certain regulations stay in place in regards to environment and things like that however. We don't need to work for $1/day to be able to compete in the global market.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
diverjay
The Depth of Liberal Hypocrisy is Beyond Fathom.
02:12 PM on 01/31/2012
Agreed and fanned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Carl E Cook
06:38 PM on 02/11/2012
right on
12:04 PM on 01/30/2012
Due to high labor costs and over regulation, the US has basically priced itself out of many markets and it will only get worse.
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01:52 PM on 01/30/2012
No that is due to the greed of people like you seeking to maximize profit by forcing labor here to compete against developing world labor. You and your values are to blame.
02:13 PM on 01/30/2012
The politicians made it all possible.
01:19 PM on 01/31/2012
hear! hear!
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
09:40 AM on 01/30/2012
China's lack of environmental regulations is a factor too -- one which will bite China in the arse in the next decade. All of the products in the list are hard on the environment in some way.

Another factor is the sweatshop labour standards -- which will have to be corrected eventually as Chinese workers find their voice.

And another is the ability of Chinese entrepreneurs to vanish with all the liquid assets, leaving their employees with up to two months of unpaid wages.
03:19 PM on 01/29/2012
"China's 1.3 trillion citizens" Hmm, I don't think so. There hasn't been anywhere near a trillion people in all of recorded history.
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MJinCanada
Safe from zombies until my 2nd cup of coffee
09:42 AM on 01/30/2012
Shows how much real thought went into this article, doesn't it?

Especially since it hints that Chinese sweatshop labour and environmental trashing are good things.
12:05 PM on 01/30/2012
The Chinese people have a strong work ethic, something that has all but disappeared in the US.
12:44 PM on 01/29/2012
With State backing and slave labor, is there any wonder?
12:03 PM on 01/29/2012
The Ugly truth of the matter is that China has far more workers and a vastly much larger access to resources that we do. here are the examples.
The have massive untapped coal sources, ours are greatly diminished. They simply have more coal than us to mine.

They have way more people, so of course they are going to brew more beer.

Lets face it they have a vastly larger market and way more resources than we do. When you are running out of a reaource you just cannot snap your fingers and make enough to compete with some one that has way more than you do. Yea It sucks but it is the truth. We Americans wasted what we had on faster cars and keeping up with the next guy and now when it matters we do not physically have what it takes to maintain our standing in the world market. From my point of veiw everyone needs to just slow daown and prepare to live a much less technical life because when our coal and fuel run out so will the electricity to run all your toys and gadgets that make up the way you all live now.
01:22 PM on 01/31/2012
china also inports us coal. us has over 500 years of coal and coal can be made in to oil and nat gas. what the us needs is a vison and leader ship. the us also needs to make more steel
LibChicAZ
I am the People, the Mob
11:33 AM on 01/29/2012
These slide shows are so annoying, just show the list!
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kidcat24
Capital is only the fruit of labor. Lincoln
01:51 AM on 01/29/2012
I was told my whole life how bad communism was and suddenly it became okay. Even the republican candidates were yelling about communist Cuba the other night. But they seem perfectly fine letting our manufacturing go to communist China.
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Cdangers
wish people would pick up a book once in a while.
10:21 PM on 01/28/2012
"Industries The U.S. Has Lost To China"?? HUH? Just because they make more doesn't mean the industry has been lost. There are 1.3 billion people and they now have more money they ever had so that accounts for most things on the list. Up until recently, Chinese people weren't allowed to buy cars. Now they have money and the government allows private ownership so production goes up dramatically. Keep in mind that the cars they make, suck. High tech... they steal everything from western companies that manufacture there. Beer. Did I mention that there's 1.4 billion people there who have money now? Tobacco. People are smart here. We stop smoking. In China, a common greeting between men where I lived is to bow, say hello and give you 2-3 cigarettes. IPO's. They are finally getting private industries. Imagine if all the private industries in the states were all of a sudden allowed to offer an IPO where previously the government did not allow it. Cotton. Most of our clothing is made there. Steel. There developing great new cities all over the place. Of course a good percentage of them are completely empty.. but they have them.
07:49 AM on 01/30/2012
industry has been lost. between 2001-2009, more than 43000 US factories shut down and reopened in china, we're helping them.
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BeatlesPrudence
Beware of Liberals posing as Americans
12:51 PM on 01/31/2012
Just wait in a few years when the health and healtcare issues plague them from smoking and drinking and eating our fastfood. Their diet is changing and so will their health.
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tomteboda
10:08 PM on 01/28/2012
Nearly every one of these industries has been regulated out of existence in the USA. Free trade isn't fair trade unless there's an equivalent regulatory environment in all locations.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kidcat24
Capital is only the fruit of labor. Lincoln
01:44 AM on 01/29/2012
Have you seen the air and water in China?
12:07 PM on 01/30/2012
It's a problem but the US went too far on the regulations.
10:01 AM on 01/29/2012
Exactly! I also think that unions played a role as well.. at least in some of these industries. Companies were forced out of business when they were no longer competitive as a result of unrealistic pay and benefit packages.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
o3mta3o
04:15 AM on 01/30/2012
the only unrealistic pay and benefit packages are the ones the CEOs took home.
07:53 AM on 01/30/2012
the only unrealistic pay packages are those of executives and CEOs. American labour must be paid livable wages and not have to compete with third world labour for pennies on the dollar. Free trade agreements were entirely tailored for corporations. labour was never a consideration. China's labour model must be rejected at all costs and trade agreements need to be renegotiated so the labour and environmental standards are reciprocal across the board.
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dadw5boys
Disabled Vietnam Vet
09:18 PM on 01/28/2012
Have you ordered anything from China ? The shipping cost are low compared to shipping cost in the USA. By the time you pay shipping the cost would be the same if they made it here. The only thing I see would affect cost of making it here is the wage paid per worker and benifits like Health Insurance.