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- <text id=93TT0556>
- <title>
- Nov. 29, 1993: America's New Competitive Muscle
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 29, 1993 Is Freud Dead?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ECONOMY, Page 28
- America's New Competitive Muscle
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>By Richard Lacayo--Reported by Jordan Bonfante/Los Angeles and John F. Dickerson/New
- York
- </p>
- <p> On the wall of Scott Montgomery's office in Georgetown, Connecticut,
- is a list of the 62 countries, from Japan to Poland, where Cannondale
- bikes does business. "I have it up there for inspiration," says
- Montgomery, vice president of marketing. The company's ledger
- numbers are even more inspiring. In 1988 foreign sales accounted
- for 5% of its $30 million in revenue, Montgomery says. Last
- year they rose to 40%, while overall sales zoomed to $100 million.
- "We have to go where the markets are," he explains. "You have
- to fight on all fronts."
- </p>
- <p> He isn't the first American to think so. "No nation was ever
- ruined by trade," said Benjamin Franklin. But opponents of NAFTA
- felt otherwise, inspired in part by fears that American companies
- couldn't make it in foreign markets. Given the sizable U.S.
- trade deficits of the 1980s, that sinking feeling was understandable.
- In fact, the gap this year may be the worst since 1988, an estimated
- $117 billion, up from last year's $84.3 billion. The main cause
- is the global recession, which slows demand for U.S. exports,
- while America's gathering recovery has boosted the demand for
- imports.
- </p>
- <p> Yet by many important measures, U.S. companies like Cannondale
- are now muscular performers in the world market and equipped
- to do even better as trade barriers fall. The U.S. shipped out
- a record $448.2 billion in exports last year, resuming for the
- second year in a row its longtime position as the world's largest
- exporter (a title it lost to Germany every year but one between
- 1986 and 1990). Significantly, most of the increase in exports
- came from sales by small and medium-size companies, which are
- rapidly learning to think globally.
- </p>
- <p> Since exports have accounted for 55% of U.S. economic growth
- since 1987, tariff reductions of the kind ensured by NAFTA are
- certain to make American industry even more trade-oriented.
- Bill Clinton's effort to promote freer trade along the Pacific
- Rim also comes at a time when demand for consumer items--everything
- from sports equipment to kitchen appliances--is rising in
- Asian nations that have long given priority to savings over
- spending. "With Asia growing through the creation of domestic
- demand, we can jump in," says Lawrence Chimerine of the Economic
- Strategy Institute, a think tank in Washington.
- </p>
- <p> The U.S. is once again the world leader in productivity--output
- per worker-hour--the most important measure of an economy's
- power to compete. After more than two decades of healthy annual
- advances, American nonfarm productivity growth declined and
- sometimes reversed after 1973. Last year it grew nearly 3%,
- much of it due to blood-curdling corporate restructuring that
- was marked by increased automation, layoffs and lower wages.
- "The Europeans have barely begun that process," says William
- Archey, a senior vice president of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
- </p>
- <p> One example is Boeing, the largest U.S. exporter, which produces
- 60% of the world's commercial aircraft. Hobbled by U.S. defense
- cuts and a global slump in the airline industry, Boeing's 1993
- third-quarter profits slid 45% from last year. In response,
- the company is cutting 23,000 jobs through mid-1994 while at
- the same time attempting to slash in half its 12-to-18-month
- delivery time for planes.
- </p>
- <p> American firms are also beginning to capitalize on their strong
- points. "Service is an unappreciated American specialty," says
- Eric Lesin, president of AAC Systems, based in Pasadena, California,
- a company that sells computerized cost-control systems for large
- telephone networks. "Sony can snap out a Walkman, but they can't
- send you a technician to fix it." The priority given by foreign
- buyers to quality and service allows American exporters to de-emphasize
- price cutting, which is one reason export-related jobs in the
- U.S. pay on average 17% more than jobs that produce goods sold
- only domestically.
- </p>
- <p> Increased experience abroad has also taught companies the ins
- and outs of foreign sales. Microsoft, the software giant based
- in Washington State, has learned to use foreign employees to
- staff its overseas marketing and distribution operations. International
- sales represent 55% of the company's $3.8 billion annual revenues,
- up from about 45% five years ago. "The local employees understand
- the bureaucracy and how to get through the red tape, which is
- usually much worse than in this country," says Charles Stevens,
- Microsoft's general manager for worldwide business strategy.
- "They also understand the customer."
- </p>
- <p> Yet export growth won't excite American workers very much until
- they see more of the benefits that American businesses are reaping.
- For three decades after World War II, higher American wages
- followed closely upon improvements in productivity. That stalled
- when companies grew bloated in the 1970s and early '80s. After
- the widespread layoffs that ensued, labor found itself in a
- weakened position, which allowed employers to hoard the new
- gains as productivity turned back up.
- </p>
- <p> The further growth of American trade will also require sustained
- attention on the outside world, which the debate over NAFTA
- went some way to promote. Not long ago, Pasadena's Lesin had
- trouble cashing a check from Puerto Rico at his bank, where
- employees thought it looked kind of foreign. "Do you even know
- where that is?" Lesin asked. "Sure," replied the manager. "Next
- to Argentina." Note to some Americans: To get on the road to
- riches, the first thing you need is a map.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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