Job Quality Newsletter – Manufacturing Day
Manufacturing jobs are frequently touted as good jobs — positions that provide high wages, substantial benefits, and opportunities for advancement.
However, not all manufacturing jobs meet that standard. Manufacturing Day serves as a reminder of the sector’s promise and a chance to reflect on how it can move closer to delivering truly good jobs — those that provide stability, dignity, and opportunity.
In this edition, we unpack why manufacturing jobs are often seen as desirable yet don’t consistently deliver on that promise, highlight research that shows how efforts to strengthen businesses can also improve the quality of jobs they provide, and consider how government purchasing power can be used to set higher job standards across the sector. We also share lessons from a company that navigated a crisis by putting workers at the center, showing how investment in people can fuel both resilience and success.
In this piece, I ask whether manufacturing jobs live up to their reputation as pathways to economic opportunity. Drawing on history, case studies, and recent research, I highlight how job quality depends on the choices business leaders make and the support systems available to them. Read more here.
Genesis at Work: Evaluating the Effects of Manufacturing Extension on Business Success and Job Quality
This report examines the impact of manufacturing extension services on both business performance and job quality. It provides evidence that supports aligning competitiveness interventions with strategies that strengthen the quality of work, showing that business competitiveness and improvements in job quality can be complementary rather than competing goals. Check out the report here.
Policy Corner – Made In America and Public Procurement
Buy American? Let’s Buy a Future for American Workers
In this op-ed for Newsweek, Mark G. Popovich — former director of our Good Companies/Good Jobs Initiative — and I argue that “Buy American” policies from the federal government should go beyond favoring domestic production. They should also invest in creating better jobs and stronger communities. Read the op-ed here.
Procurement with Purpose: Improving Job Quality and Equity Through Public Procurement Reform
This paper demonstrates how the federal government’s $2.1 trillion in annual purchasing power can be leveraged to enhance standards for job quality. It highlights practical ways procurement can ensure that public dollars not only buy products, but also support secure, sustainable jobs. Read the paper to learn more.
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