China topped the United States as the world's largest manufacturer for the first time last year, according to a study Monday by economic research firm IHS Global Insight. China accounted for 19.8 percent of global manufacturing in 2010, compared with 19.4 percent for the US - $1.995 trillion worth, compared with $1.952 trillion, according to IHS.
But by measures of productivity, China remained far behind the United States, with US manufacturing workers generating more than eight times the value per person than China's.
"In other words, the US manufacturing sector is producing roughly the same amount of output in 2010 with 11.5 million workers as opposed to its Chinese counterpart with around 100 million workers," IHS said. Japan remained a distant third last year, generating $1.027 trillion by manufacturing, followed by Germany, with $618 billion.
But the most telling indicators were the pace of growth: over 2008-2010, China's manufacturing sector grew at a pace of 20.2 percent per year, while the United States grew at 1.8 percent and Japan at 4.25 percent. Germany and fifth-ranked South Korea both contracted, and sixth-ranked India grew at 7.3 percent annually.
Comments
Comments are closed.