Feb 22

Past Event

Why—and Which—Manufacturing Matters: Innovation and Production in the United States

Event Materials

Video

Highlights

  • Looking to States for Solutions

    Bruce Katz: This should be a period where we’re not waiting for Washington to make a move. We need to get things done in the metros, in the states and bring those solutions back to Washington policymakers.

  • Manufacturing Can Pay

    Howard Wial: We know manufacturing jobs can pay very well, and the recent decline in these wages is a cause for concern.

    Howard Wial

  • Creating Both Supply and Demand

    Susan Helper, Case Western Reserve University: A manufacturing strategy reflects coordinated investments, and can illustrate ways to create both the supply and the demand.

  • Tax Policies and Offshoring

    Irwin Jacobs, Qualcomm: Qualcomm, like many companies, does some of its business offshore -- this is due to U.S. tax policies, which can be a disincentive for many aspects of doing business in the U.S.

Summary

Despite massive job losses in the last decade, U.S. manufacturing remains critical to the nation’s economic future and requires a new era of policy attention. Thus, it is essential that the U.S. reach consensus on the importance of manufacturing and then move aggressively to maintain the nation’s facility for novel product innovation while upgrading the capacity for continuous incremental and process improvements.

On February 22, the Metropolitan Policy Program at Brookings hosted a forum exploring the type of manufacturing the nation is most likely to retain and build, as well as a policy framework for strengthening high-wage, export-intensive production in America. Brookings and CONNECT Innovation Institute scholars will present new arguments from complementary research studies assessing production activities and innovation. A panel of CONNECT researchers—including experts from the private sector and academia—presented their policy recommendations, focusing on the experiences of specific industries for supporting both radical and incremental innovation in U.S. manufacturing. Following the panel, Irwin Jacobs, co-founder of Qualcomm, Inc. and a member of CONNECT Innovation Institute, offered a keynote address.

After each panel, speakers took audience questions. Participants joined the discussion on Twitter using the hashtag #usmfg.

Event Agenda

  • Welcome

    • Peter Cowhey

      Dean, School of International Relations and Pacific Studies, University of California, San Diego

      Chairman, CONNECT Innovation Institute

    • Portait: Bruce Katz

      Bruce Katz

      Vice President and Director, Metropolitan Policy Program

      The Adeline M. and Alfred I. Johnson Chair in Urban and Metropolitan Policy

  • Presentation

  • Panel Discussion

    • Moderator: Robert Atkinson

      Founder and President

      Information Technology and Innovation Foundation

    • Dan Breznitz

      Associate Professor, The College of Management and the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs

      Georgia Institute of Technology

    • Erica R.H. Fuchs

      Assistant Professor, Department of Engineering and Public Policy

      Carnegie Mellon University

    • Elisabeth Reynolds

      Executive Director, Industrial Performance Center

      Massachusetts Institute of Technology

    • Josh Whitford

      Associate Professor of Sociology

      Columbia University

  • Keynote Speaker

    • Irwin Jacobs

      Co-founder and Former Chairman, Qualcomm

      Member, CONNECT Innovation Institute

Details

February 22, 2012

9:30 AM - 12:30 PM EST

The Brookings Institution

Falk Auditorium

1775 Massachusetts Ave., NW

Map

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