total jobs On EmploymentCrossing

1,470,584

new jobs this week On EmploymentCrossing

588

Employment News

Manufacturing in U.S. Gains Jobs but Wages Fall By jim  |  Dated: 12-30-2011

ge_160x120

In the United States, manufacturing companies are hiring once again, which helps to soften a slide in factory employment. It is likely though that lower wages up to retirement will be how a new generation of blue collar workers will operate. This is especially true for global companies such as General Electric. As labor costs continue to decrease at their appliance factories, the company is bringing the production of water heaters and some refrigerators back to the United States, all while expanding its staff to do so effectively, according to the New York Times.

The new hires at General Electric will be earning anywhere from $10 to $15 per hour less than the pay scale for hourly employees who are already employed by the company. There is also a concession that the employees will not be able to catch up with their wages for the foreseeable future. Steel and tire companies within the auto industry are also seeing these types of union contracts to go along with manufacturers of farm equipment and other heavy equipment. Gordon Pavy, the president of the Labor and Employment Relations Association, said the following:

“Some companies want to keep work here, or bring it back from Asia,” Mr. Pavy said, “but in order to do that they have to be competitive in the final prices of their products, and one way to be competitive is to lower the compensation of their American workers.”

The pay scale for the new workers, $12 to $19 per hour, is much less than the pay scale for longtime workers, which is $21 to $32 per hour. This new pay scale is going to threaten the middle class status of the best paid blue collar jobs left in the manufacturing industry of the country. New employees at Ford Motor Company’s stamping plant are also operating under a similar pay scale. The thing with these new contracts though is that no one is objecting to them or the wages. This includes he 2,000 hourly employees at General Electric, the 2,900 hourly employees at Ford, their unions and Louisville, Kentucky Mayor Greg Fischer.

“The trade-off is absolutely worth it,” Mayor Fischer said. “You must have a globally competitive wage to create jobs,” the mayor insisted.

One of the reasons that the wages have not been objected is the fact that by the time the new employees can top out at the highest hourly rate, the baby boomers making those rates now will no longer be around to tell them of what they are missing. Linda Thomas was one of the first employees to be hired under the new arrangement back in 2005, who makes $18.19 per hour, which has almost topped out. Thomas said the following:

“You don’t want to rock the boat,” Ms. Thomas said. “You take a chance on losing everything you have if you do.”

Career Connect  (From our other career blogs):

Testimonial of the Week

The number of jobs listed on EmploymentCrossing is great. I appreciate the efforts that are taken to ensure the accuracy and validity of all jobs.
  • Richard S Baltimore, MD
Sign Up now

Only TravelingCrossing consolidates every job it can find in the domain and puts all of the job listings it locates in one place.

  • We have more jobs than any other job board.
  • We list jobs you will not find elsewhere that are hidden in small regional publications and employer websites
  • We collect jobs from more than 4,429,376 websites and post them on our site.
  • We are private, and therefore far fewer people are applying for the jobs on our site than are applying for those on public job boards.
EmploymentCrossing provides an excellent service. I have recommended the website to many people..
Laurie H - Dallas, TX
  • All we do is research jobs.
  • Our team of researchers, programmers, and analysts find you jobs from over 1,000 career pages and other sources
  • Our members get more interviews and jobs than people who use "public job boards"
Shoot for the moon. Even if you miss it, you will land among the stars.
TravelingCrossing - #1 Job Aggregation and Private Job-Opening Research Service — The Most Quality Jobs Anywhere
TravelingCrossing is the first job consolidation service in the employment industry to seek to include every job that exists in the world.
Copyright © 2025 TravelingCrossing - All rights reserved. 168