(WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
版主: 牛河梁
#1 (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
The First Victim of Trump’s Trade War: Michigan’s Economy
Story by Jeanne Whalen, Christopher Otts
DETROIT—If President Trump’s trade war has a physical battleground, it is Michigan, where companies and workers are already feeling the beginning of an onslaught that could blow a hole in the state’s economy.
Nearly 20% of the economy is tied to the auto industry, which has become increasingly dependent on parts and vehicles from Canada, Mexico and China—imports Trump hit with steep tariffs in recent weeks. This trade has grown so large that Michigan ranks fifth in the nation by the size of its imports and exports, even though its total economy ranks 14th.
Detroit’s automotive executives have shifted into battle mode. They are stockpiling imported components, wrestling with suppliers over price increases and setting up war rooms to figure out how to cut costs.
Workers at the state’s biggest auto factories are tightening their belts, too, in case tariffs spark layoffs by causing a spike in vehicle prices and a drop in demand. Some early moves have added to their jitters. Hours after the latest tariffs took effect last week, Jeep parent Stellantis temporarily laid off about 900 workers in Michigan and Indiana who supply parts to factories in Canada and Mexico that the company idled at the same time.
One auto executive early last week darkly predicted “Chernobyl” if tariffs broadly hit imported parts, which they’re scheduled to do next month. Industry executives and analysts later said what the administration outlined Wednesday was worse than they expected.
Some prominent voices, including the Detroit-based United Auto Workers union, say the upset will be worth it in the long run if tariffs do what Trump has pledged: expand U.S. manufacturing and unwind the offshoring of jobs that decimated many communities in Michigan and beyond.
For now, levies on steel and aluminum imports and on goods from China that took effect in March are starting to bite Michigan manufacturers. Additional tariffs on auto imports and other goods have also begun to pinch in recent days.
Hitting the phones
On the outskirts of Detroit, auto-parts manufacturer Luxit was scrambling to deal with the extra 20% in tariffs Trump imposed on Chinese imports when it learned the president was raising the tariffs to 54%.
The added cost is prompting Luxit, which relies on Chinese imports to make some vehicle lighting and other components, to begin reshoring one production line from China to a Luxit factory in Tennessee, and to consider moving other production to Michigan, chief executive Stephane Vedie said. The line moving to Tennessee employs eight people in China but will employ only two in Tennessee because the equipment will be more automated, he said. A production transfer to Michigan would create about 10 jobs.
Meanwhile, Vedie and his colleagues are hitting the phones to convince Luxit’s automaker customers to pay more.
That, too, has a cost. “The time I am speaking to convince our customers to accept the price increases, I’m not speaking with them about new business, about growth,” Vedie said.
Mary Buchzeiger, CEO of Lucerne International, another local auto supplier, is also talking with customers about her need to raise prices because of the new China tariffs. About 80% of the automotive hinges, brackets and other components Lucerne sells are made in China.
“There is no way we can absorb these tariffs. I don’t have 20% margin to give,” said Buchzeiger, who owns the company, which employs 25 people.
The new 25% tariff on imported aluminum is also scrambling her efforts to build a new factory in the U.S. to forge metal into pistons and other parts. She is trying to land outside funding for the project, and is close to picking a Midwestern site for the plant—ideally in Michigan. But the tariffs are delaying talks because no one is certain about the auto industry’s future, she said.
Some forecasts for the industry are dire. Anderson Economic Group, a Michigan consulting firm, estimates the tariffs will add $2,500 to $12,000 to the price of many new cars, and up to $20,000 for luxury imports. That will push new vehicles further beyond the reach of consumers already struggling with average prices of roughly $48,000.
“This is going to have a dramatic negative effect on car sales in the United States…and there will be production shutdowns,” said Patrick Anderson, the firm’s CEO. “The epicenter for job losses due to these tariffs is somewhere between Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Canada.”
Two big automakers—Ford and Stellantis—said they would offer discounts on vehicles through the end of April.
Gabriel Ehrlich, a University of Michigan economist, forecasts the new steel and aluminum tariffs alone will cost Michigan 600 auto manufacturing jobs by the end of next year, and an additional 1,700 jobs in industries that serve auto workers. The auto tariffs will have an even bigger impact, he said.
It’s not just manufacturing jobs at stake. The auto industry provides some of Michigan’s most lucrative white-collar design and engineering jobs and helps finance research programs at state universities. Every position in an auto factory also supports three additional jobs in the state that depend on auto workers eating out, shopping for clothing or buying a house, Ehrlich said.
Tariffs also pose a threat to Michigan’s agricultural sector, which ranks among the top in the U.S. in the production of tart cherries, asparagus, and squash, and the state’s nascent tech industry, centered on the production of drones and other battery-powered vehicles.
An industry town
At a sandwich shop on the north side of Detroit, owner Leona Milton said she isn’t sure how tariffs will affect her, but she knows her business relies on a healthy auto industry.
Milton got her start delivering lunch to auto workers during Covid, driving up to factory gates with a cooler full of sandwiches. That helped her save up to open her shop, What’s the Dill, three years ago, where many of those same workers formed her customer base.
“It will affect us if the auto industry loses positions,” Milton said as she wrapped up a recent lunch shift. “People will lose their ability to shop with us…. They’ll have to use their money for bills or groceries instead.”
But many Michiganders, upset by the factory shutdowns of the free-trade era, are choosing to focus on the long term. Mira Zeigler-Moore, 54, a longtime Stellantis worker in Detroit, said she is no Trump fan, but she hopes his 25% auto tariffs are a first step toward increasing automotive production in the U.S.
Kelly Nering, a finance professional whose father worked at Ford, said she thinks tariffs will cause uncomfortable price increases in the short term but will be worth it in the end.
“Let’s deal with it. You can’t go on Amazon and get everything you used to get and have it be cheap. You can’t maybe go get your foreign car,” said Nering, who was having dinner at the bar of an Italian restaurant in Detroit’s trendy Corktown neighborhood. “In the long term we are protecting our interests, and we’re going to increase jobs in America.”
A few seats away, Tom Lynn, a software consultant, agreed: “The short-term effects, could they be hard on some people? Sure. But the long-term effects, I think it’s the right thing to do.”
Motor City has survived many ups and downs, from its heyday in the 1950s to its humbling by Japanese competitors in the 1980s. The Great Recession of 2008 tipped two of Detroit’s big automakers into bankruptcy, dealing a near death blow to the U.S. auto industry. The city itself filed for bankruptcy in 2013.
Recent years brought a rebound as Ford, General Motors and Stellantis returned to profitability, and leaders in and around Detroit sought to diversify the economy into new high-tech sectors that make use of Detroit’s transportation expertise. After an extensive renovation financed by Ford, the city’s ornate Michigan Central train station reopened last year as a tech and cultural hub, symbolizing Detroit’s rebirth.
Warning lights are flashing again. Retail activity in Michigan plunged last month, a recent survey showed, in a sign that consumers are worried about the economy. The fall “sounds the alarm that Michigan’s retailers are deeply feeling the impacts of the current economic uncertainty,” said William J. Hallan, president of the Michigan Retailers Association.
The tariffs, meanwhile, are the latest blow to the auto-supply base, which has taken multiple hits in recent years from pandemic factory shutdowns, the computer-chip shortage of 2021-22 and the UAW strike of 2023. “I’m just waiting for the zombies to come out of the woods,” said Lucerne’s Buchzeiger.
Hope, fear and stockpiling
The late 1990s and early 2000s were a dark time for Michigan, as many auto manufacturers took advantage of free-trade deals such as Nafta to move production to cheaper countries. Some offshored to Mexico or China. Others moved factories to cheaper southern states including Kentucky and Tennessee. Michigan had about 185,000 auto manufacturing jobs last year, down from 336,000 in 2000, according to Ehrlich, the economist.
The UAW says it is cautiously optimistic Trump’s new tariffs can reverse that trend.
“Some economists are trying to scare anyone, saying that the costs of tariffs will be passed on to working Americans. But the cost of Nafta was passed on to working Americans in the form of plant closures, deaths of despair and economic devastation,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video backing the tariffs in late March. “Free trade isn’t free. It’s a disaster.”
Still, Daniel Campbell, who maneuvers steel auto parts around a Stellantis factory north of Detroit, says he and many of his colleagues are worried about layoffs.
“I’m scared,” he said from his brick bungalow on the west side of Detroit, which he rents with two roommates. “We’re complaining about gas and eggs now. Who is going to be able to buy these cars that are already $80,000, and then you make it $90,000?”
The 46-year-old UAW member, who makes about $30 an hour, and one of his roommates have talked about trimming their spending, including eating out less and cutting clothing and electronics purchases.
“There’s going to come a time where we’re not going to be able to go and spend,” he said.
At work, the assembly lines have been running faster in recent weeks as Stellantis has tried to stockpile parts ahead of the tariffs, Campbell said. He and his co-workers are running out of room to store the parts.
Other automakers have also scurried to stockpile as they brace for ballooning costs and regulatory uncertainty.
GM, which builds many of its pickup trucks in Mexico, last month said it could offset up to 50% of tariff costs through short-term steps such as accelerating imports ahead of tariffs. If the company is ultimately forced to move more production from Mexico to the U.S., its labor costs will rise. UAW workers building GMC Sierras and Chevrolet Silverados in Fort Wayne, Ind., are paid some 10 times more an hour than workers building those same trucks at GM’s factory in Silao, Mexico, according to the union.
Jim Seavitt, a longtime car dealer in the shadow of Ford’s headquarters in Dearborn, Mich., said he’s relieved that Ford’s U.S.-heavy manufacturing base means that only a few of the company’s complete vehicles are subject to tariffs. But he worries about Trump’s plan to tariff parts next month, such as the engines that Ford produces in Canada for trucks built in the U.S.
“If it’s a V-8 engine…that’s gonna add 6% to 7% to the truck,” he said.
On Wednesday, salespeople in Seavitt’s dealership gathered around a lobby TV to watch Trump’s tariff announcement. Village Ford’s business is off about 20% this year because of cyclical challenges. The dealership employs 189 people.
Loice DeBerry, a 40-year car salesman at Village Ford, said more customers have been asking about tariffs. He’s at a loss for the information they want—what will it mean for prices? Are cars going to be cheaper now than later?
“We tell them, it’s the unknown,” DeBerry said.
Story by Jeanne Whalen, Christopher Otts
DETROIT—If President Trump’s trade war has a physical battleground, it is Michigan, where companies and workers are already feeling the beginning of an onslaught that could blow a hole in the state’s economy.
Nearly 20% of the economy is tied to the auto industry, which has become increasingly dependent on parts and vehicles from Canada, Mexico and China—imports Trump hit with steep tariffs in recent weeks. This trade has grown so large that Michigan ranks fifth in the nation by the size of its imports and exports, even though its total economy ranks 14th.
Detroit’s automotive executives have shifted into battle mode. They are stockpiling imported components, wrestling with suppliers over price increases and setting up war rooms to figure out how to cut costs.
Workers at the state’s biggest auto factories are tightening their belts, too, in case tariffs spark layoffs by causing a spike in vehicle prices and a drop in demand. Some early moves have added to their jitters. Hours after the latest tariffs took effect last week, Jeep parent Stellantis temporarily laid off about 900 workers in Michigan and Indiana who supply parts to factories in Canada and Mexico that the company idled at the same time.
One auto executive early last week darkly predicted “Chernobyl” if tariffs broadly hit imported parts, which they’re scheduled to do next month. Industry executives and analysts later said what the administration outlined Wednesday was worse than they expected.
Some prominent voices, including the Detroit-based United Auto Workers union, say the upset will be worth it in the long run if tariffs do what Trump has pledged: expand U.S. manufacturing and unwind the offshoring of jobs that decimated many communities in Michigan and beyond.
For now, levies on steel and aluminum imports and on goods from China that took effect in March are starting to bite Michigan manufacturers. Additional tariffs on auto imports and other goods have also begun to pinch in recent days.
Hitting the phones
On the outskirts of Detroit, auto-parts manufacturer Luxit was scrambling to deal with the extra 20% in tariffs Trump imposed on Chinese imports when it learned the president was raising the tariffs to 54%.
The added cost is prompting Luxit, which relies on Chinese imports to make some vehicle lighting and other components, to begin reshoring one production line from China to a Luxit factory in Tennessee, and to consider moving other production to Michigan, chief executive Stephane Vedie said. The line moving to Tennessee employs eight people in China but will employ only two in Tennessee because the equipment will be more automated, he said. A production transfer to Michigan would create about 10 jobs.
Meanwhile, Vedie and his colleagues are hitting the phones to convince Luxit’s automaker customers to pay more.
That, too, has a cost. “The time I am speaking to convince our customers to accept the price increases, I’m not speaking with them about new business, about growth,” Vedie said.
Mary Buchzeiger, CEO of Lucerne International, another local auto supplier, is also talking with customers about her need to raise prices because of the new China tariffs. About 80% of the automotive hinges, brackets and other components Lucerne sells are made in China.
“There is no way we can absorb these tariffs. I don’t have 20% margin to give,” said Buchzeiger, who owns the company, which employs 25 people.
The new 25% tariff on imported aluminum is also scrambling her efforts to build a new factory in the U.S. to forge metal into pistons and other parts. She is trying to land outside funding for the project, and is close to picking a Midwestern site for the plant—ideally in Michigan. But the tariffs are delaying talks because no one is certain about the auto industry’s future, she said.
Some forecasts for the industry are dire. Anderson Economic Group, a Michigan consulting firm, estimates the tariffs will add $2,500 to $12,000 to the price of many new cars, and up to $20,000 for luxury imports. That will push new vehicles further beyond the reach of consumers already struggling with average prices of roughly $48,000.
“This is going to have a dramatic negative effect on car sales in the United States…and there will be production shutdowns,” said Patrick Anderson, the firm’s CEO. “The epicenter for job losses due to these tariffs is somewhere between Detroit, Michigan, and Windsor, Canada.”
Two big automakers—Ford and Stellantis—said they would offer discounts on vehicles through the end of April.
Gabriel Ehrlich, a University of Michigan economist, forecasts the new steel and aluminum tariffs alone will cost Michigan 600 auto manufacturing jobs by the end of next year, and an additional 1,700 jobs in industries that serve auto workers. The auto tariffs will have an even bigger impact, he said.
It’s not just manufacturing jobs at stake. The auto industry provides some of Michigan’s most lucrative white-collar design and engineering jobs and helps finance research programs at state universities. Every position in an auto factory also supports three additional jobs in the state that depend on auto workers eating out, shopping for clothing or buying a house, Ehrlich said.
Tariffs also pose a threat to Michigan’s agricultural sector, which ranks among the top in the U.S. in the production of tart cherries, asparagus, and squash, and the state’s nascent tech industry, centered on the production of drones and other battery-powered vehicles.
An industry town
At a sandwich shop on the north side of Detroit, owner Leona Milton said she isn’t sure how tariffs will affect her, but she knows her business relies on a healthy auto industry.
Milton got her start delivering lunch to auto workers during Covid, driving up to factory gates with a cooler full of sandwiches. That helped her save up to open her shop, What’s the Dill, three years ago, where many of those same workers formed her customer base.
“It will affect us if the auto industry loses positions,” Milton said as she wrapped up a recent lunch shift. “People will lose their ability to shop with us…. They’ll have to use their money for bills or groceries instead.”
But many Michiganders, upset by the factory shutdowns of the free-trade era, are choosing to focus on the long term. Mira Zeigler-Moore, 54, a longtime Stellantis worker in Detroit, said she is no Trump fan, but she hopes his 25% auto tariffs are a first step toward increasing automotive production in the U.S.
Kelly Nering, a finance professional whose father worked at Ford, said she thinks tariffs will cause uncomfortable price increases in the short term but will be worth it in the end.
“Let’s deal with it. You can’t go on Amazon and get everything you used to get and have it be cheap. You can’t maybe go get your foreign car,” said Nering, who was having dinner at the bar of an Italian restaurant in Detroit’s trendy Corktown neighborhood. “In the long term we are protecting our interests, and we’re going to increase jobs in America.”
A few seats away, Tom Lynn, a software consultant, agreed: “The short-term effects, could they be hard on some people? Sure. But the long-term effects, I think it’s the right thing to do.”
Motor City has survived many ups and downs, from its heyday in the 1950s to its humbling by Japanese competitors in the 1980s. The Great Recession of 2008 tipped two of Detroit’s big automakers into bankruptcy, dealing a near death blow to the U.S. auto industry. The city itself filed for bankruptcy in 2013.
Recent years brought a rebound as Ford, General Motors and Stellantis returned to profitability, and leaders in and around Detroit sought to diversify the economy into new high-tech sectors that make use of Detroit’s transportation expertise. After an extensive renovation financed by Ford, the city’s ornate Michigan Central train station reopened last year as a tech and cultural hub, symbolizing Detroit’s rebirth.
Warning lights are flashing again. Retail activity in Michigan plunged last month, a recent survey showed, in a sign that consumers are worried about the economy. The fall “sounds the alarm that Michigan’s retailers are deeply feeling the impacts of the current economic uncertainty,” said William J. Hallan, president of the Michigan Retailers Association.
The tariffs, meanwhile, are the latest blow to the auto-supply base, which has taken multiple hits in recent years from pandemic factory shutdowns, the computer-chip shortage of 2021-22 and the UAW strike of 2023. “I’m just waiting for the zombies to come out of the woods,” said Lucerne’s Buchzeiger.
Hope, fear and stockpiling
The late 1990s and early 2000s were a dark time for Michigan, as many auto manufacturers took advantage of free-trade deals such as Nafta to move production to cheaper countries. Some offshored to Mexico or China. Others moved factories to cheaper southern states including Kentucky and Tennessee. Michigan had about 185,000 auto manufacturing jobs last year, down from 336,000 in 2000, according to Ehrlich, the economist.
The UAW says it is cautiously optimistic Trump’s new tariffs can reverse that trend.
“Some economists are trying to scare anyone, saying that the costs of tariffs will be passed on to working Americans. But the cost of Nafta was passed on to working Americans in the form of plant closures, deaths of despair and economic devastation,” UAW President Shawn Fain said in a video backing the tariffs in late March. “Free trade isn’t free. It’s a disaster.”
Still, Daniel Campbell, who maneuvers steel auto parts around a Stellantis factory north of Detroit, says he and many of his colleagues are worried about layoffs.
“I’m scared,” he said from his brick bungalow on the west side of Detroit, which he rents with two roommates. “We’re complaining about gas and eggs now. Who is going to be able to buy these cars that are already $80,000, and then you make it $90,000?”
The 46-year-old UAW member, who makes about $30 an hour, and one of his roommates have talked about trimming their spending, including eating out less and cutting clothing and electronics purchases.
“There’s going to come a time where we’re not going to be able to go and spend,” he said.
At work, the assembly lines have been running faster in recent weeks as Stellantis has tried to stockpile parts ahead of the tariffs, Campbell said. He and his co-workers are running out of room to store the parts.
Other automakers have also scurried to stockpile as they brace for ballooning costs and regulatory uncertainty.
GM, which builds many of its pickup trucks in Mexico, last month said it could offset up to 50% of tariff costs through short-term steps such as accelerating imports ahead of tariffs. If the company is ultimately forced to move more production from Mexico to the U.S., its labor costs will rise. UAW workers building GMC Sierras and Chevrolet Silverados in Fort Wayne, Ind., are paid some 10 times more an hour than workers building those same trucks at GM’s factory in Silao, Mexico, according to the union.
Jim Seavitt, a longtime car dealer in the shadow of Ford’s headquarters in Dearborn, Mich., said he’s relieved that Ford’s U.S.-heavy manufacturing base means that only a few of the company’s complete vehicles are subject to tariffs. But he worries about Trump’s plan to tariff parts next month, such as the engines that Ford produces in Canada for trucks built in the U.S.
“If it’s a V-8 engine…that’s gonna add 6% to 7% to the truck,” he said.
On Wednesday, salespeople in Seavitt’s dealership gathered around a lobby TV to watch Trump’s tariff announcement. Village Ford’s business is off about 20% this year because of cyclical challenges. The dealership employs 189 people.
Loice DeBerry, a 40-year car salesman at Village Ford, said more customers have been asking about tariffs. He’s at a loss for the information they want—what will it mean for prices? Are cars going to be cheaper now than later?
“We tell them, it’s the unknown,” DeBerry said.
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#6 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
里面已经提到有些生产转移到美国了。
所谓Michigan经济,如果完全依赖进口,这样的经济也确实应该受打击。
所谓Michigan经济,如果完全依赖进口,这样的经济也确实应该受打击。
共产党就是赤裸裸黑手党
#7 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
我在汽车零件工业,就我所知在过去的几十年,公司不停的裁员关在大湖区生产线,然后移到他国,主要是墨西哥,最近还在加速,主要是为了降低成本追求更高的利润。这下子领导层傻眼了。估计会后悔关了这里的生产线。
x2

#9 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
电视机的制造会回到美国吗?冰箱洗衣机的制造会回到美国吗,汽车早晚也是同样的命运,除非美国的工人愿意跟东南亚国家一样愿意下产线进富士康
#13 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
汽车行业之前有内燃机和变速箱技术做护城河,发展电车之后一龙马把专利给开放了,结果汽车行业变成了电子产品,跟以前不同了。门槛降低了中国和东南亚这些造手机和电脑的都轻松涌入市场
#15 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
我预测,密西根经济遭重创,种地的,辛苦劳作的非移被一网打尽了,大豆玉米蓝莓都烂在地里,
大豆玉米因为关税出口受阻,进口农药化肥全面涨价,农民们算是完了。畜牧业,养殖屠宰
都靠非移,被川总抓走了,鸡胸脯排牛扒涨价,势在必行,养殖完了。汽车行业,因为价格昂贵,
继续卖不动,工人工资上涨,成本增加,被迫关闭生产线解雇工人,工人也完了。
大豆玉米因为关税出口受阻,进口农药化肥全面涨价,农民们算是完了。畜牧业,养殖屠宰
都靠非移,被川总抓走了,鸡胸脯排牛扒涨价,势在必行,养殖完了。汽车行业,因为价格昂贵,
继续卖不动,工人工资上涨,成本增加,被迫关闭生产线解雇工人,工人也完了。
#16 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
川总会补贴。共党票仓。共党上台农场主可以躺平不用干领龙虾。laomei9 写了: 2025年 4月 7日 20:34 我预测,密西根经济遭重创,种地的,辛苦劳作的非移被一网打尽了,大豆玉米蓝莓都烂在地里,
大豆玉米因为关税出口受阻,进口农药化肥全面涨价,农民们算是完了。畜牧业,养殖屠宰
都靠非移,被川总抓走了,鸡胸脯排牛扒涨价,势在必行,养殖完了。汽车行业,因为价格昂贵,
继续卖不动,工人工资上涨,成本增加,被迫关闭生产线解雇工人,工人也完了。
#18 Re: (WSJ) 川普貿易戰的第一個受害者:密西根州的經濟
就在大豆玉米产量都前五的州,就住在大乡下,旁边就是农场,都是机械化,还没见过非移。非移估计还是大城市多。烂在地里不可能。laomei9 写了: 2025年 4月 7日 20:34 我预测,密西根经济遭重创,种地的,辛苦劳作的非移被一网打尽了,大豆玉米蓝莓都烂在地里,
大豆玉米因为关税出口受阻,进口农药化肥全面涨价,农民们算是完了。畜牧业,养殖屠宰
都靠非移,被川总抓走了,鸡胸脯排牛扒涨价,势在必行,养殖完了。汽车行业,因为价格昂贵,
继续卖不动,工人工资上涨,成本增加,被迫关闭生产线解雇工人,工人也完了。
随手查了查。
农药:
美国在农药(包括除草剂、杀虫剂、杀菌剂等)的进出口方面是「进口略多于出口」,但基本上能够自给自足。只是出于成本、制造效率或供应链战略的考量,会选择进口一些特定原料或成品。
进口:
• 每年美国进口农药总值约 40-50 亿美元。
• 主要进口来源国:中国、印度、德国、以色列。
• 进口的多为:
• 原药(active ingredients)
• 中间体(intermediates)
• 或便宜的大宗品如草甘膦(Glyphosate)原料。
出口:
• 每年出口农药价值约 30-40 亿美元。
• 出口目的地:加拿大、墨西哥、巴西、阿根廷、澳大利亚、欧洲。
• 美国制造商品牌实力强,产品附加值高。
汽车行业本来就在大幅度外移,多数跑墨西哥。工作不停的在减少。关键底层工人是大多数啊,工作都没了就算再便宜的车他能买的起吗?失业率上升,贫富差距变大,社会治安变差。Michigan 的Flint和Saginaw就是最好的例子啊,不过人们视而不见而已啊。