Despite a Strong Dollar, the U.S. Retains a Big Manufacturing Cost Advantage Over Europe, Japan, and Other Developed Countries
Despite a Strong Dollar, the U.S. Retains a Big Manufacturing Cost Advantage Over Europe, Japan, and Other Developed Countries Click here for high-resolution version · Marketwired

CHICAGO, IL--(Marketwired - Jul 23, 2015) - The rise of the U.S. dollar against the euro and other world currencies over the past year has reduced the cost-competitiveness of U.S. manufacturing compared with economies such as Germany, France, Japan, Australia, and Brazil. But the U.S. still maintains a very significant cost advantage over these economies, and therefore manufacturers are unlikely to shift production to other nations. These are among the findings of new research released today by The Boston Consulting Group (BCG).

Since mid-2014, the manufacturing cost advantages of China, South Korea, India, and Mexico have narrowed considerably against European economies and Japan, though not against the U.S., because their currencies have remained relatively stable against the dollar. Switzerland and South Korea lost competitive ground against all major goods-exporting economies mainly because of currency fluctuations. The decline in the euro did tip the competitive balance in two European economies -- the Czech Republic and Poland -- where average manufacturing costs are now lower than in the U.S.

The findings are based on an updated assessment of direct manufacturing costs based on BCG's Global Manufacturing Cost-Competitiveness Index. Introduced in mid-2014, the index tracks changes in production costs in the world's 25 largest export economies. The index covers four primary drivers of manufacturing competitiveness: wages, productivity growth, energy costs, and currency exchange rates. Research conducted last year found that manufacturing cost competitiveness around the world had changed dramatically over the previous decade. Several economies traditionally regarded as having high costs, such as the U.S., had become much more competitive. Most emerging markets known for low costs -- particularly the largest market, China -- had become far more expensive.

"While the major drop in the euro has reduced costs for European exporters, they're still about 10 percent more expensive on average than U.S.-based manufacturers," said Harold L. Sirkin, a BCG senior partner and a coauthor of the analysis. "The U.S. remains one of the lowest-cost locations for manufacturing in the developed world."

Several factors have enabled the U.S. and other developed economies to retain their competitiveness relative to many of their trade partners. One factor is differences in labor productivity. In the U.S., increases in labor productivity continue to largely offset increases in wages. In the UK, where the pound has risen sharply against the euro and moderately against the dollar, manufacturing wages adjusted for productivity dropped by 9 percent over the past year. In the Netherlands, productivity-adjusted wages declined by 17 percent.