Outsourcing Shifts Into Reverse: Caterpillar Brings Production Back from Japan = +1,000 New Jobs
Wall Street Journal -- "Caterpillar said it plans to shift production of small construction machinery  from Japan to a new plant in North America that is expected to employ  more than 1,000 people. The new plant, whose location wasn't identified, will become the  company's global source for small bulldozers and mini-hydraulic  excavators. It also will export partially assembled mini-excavators to  Europe to improve delivery times for European customers. 
 "The markets for smaller track-type tractors and mini-excavators have  evolved significantly in the past 30 years, with the majority of  customers now located in North America and Europe," said Mary Bell, vice  president for Caterpillar's Building Construction Products division.  "Producing these machines at a North American location will put us in  the best possible position to serve our customers in the building  construction industry." 
Caterpillar also is moving assembly of its larger excavators from  Akashi, Japan, to a new plant in Victoria, Texas, to free up production  capacity for Asian markets where sales of Caterpillar equipment have  been surging in recent years. The new Texas plant is expected to be  completed by the middle of 2012. 
Caterpillar's announcement of a new plant without naming a location  will likely set off an intense competition between U.S. states hungry  for manufacturing jobs. States interested in hosting plant can be  expected to offer the company incentive-laden aid packages with tax  breaks and government grants for training new employees. 
Nearly all of Caterpillar's investments in new U.S. plants in recent  years have been in the South, particularly Texas and North Carolina, where  the company's Building Construction Products division is based.  Caterpillar already builds compact construction machinery in Clayton and  Sanford, N.C."
HT: Mike W.
HT: Mike W.

6 Comments:
Maybe this should be called an inverse outsource because one caterpillar can replace a hundred men with shovels.
Cat also just bought a small equipment maker in China -- presumably with its employees intact. I guess corporate capital is always moving around the world.
I'd like to hear of larger companies choosing places in the North over the South, instead of another "let's dump on the North" article, Mr. Perry.
Honda's factories in Ohio stand out like a sore thumb - as they are a transplant that produces in a worker-friendly state.
As for Caterpillar's move, Japan has a bit of a problem with having that radiation disaster. While it may not completely affect their factories, the disaster does affect their sales through PR.
Two weeks ago Whirlpool announced plans to lay off 5,000 in North America and Europe. 1,200 from a plant in Texas. Adobe announced plans to lay off 750 people yesterday. Weren't we suppose to get jobs from the information age? So we are still losing jobs.
I don't it's an issue of North state vs. South state issue as much as it's a "right to work" state vs. "forced unionism" state issue, and the fact that most "right to work" states are in the South.
The left in Japan must be lamenting how manufacturing is leaving the country, and how they should require more unions, higher pay and longer vacations to solve the problem.
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