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Manufacturing for the Security of the United States: Reviving Competitiveness and Reducing Deficits

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Manufacturing for the Security of the United States: Reviving Competitiveness and Reducing Deficits

Contributors:

By (Author) Robert E. McGarrah

ISBN:

9780899304274

Publisher:

Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Imprint:

Praeger Publishers Inc

Publication Date:

20th April 1990

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Dewey:

338.47670973

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

200

Description

An important contribution to the literature of business and international security, this volume takes a two-pronged approach to the study of U.S. manufacturing. McGarrah first provides an in-depth examination of the internal and external factors that have contributed to the decline of U.S. manufacturing capabilities in recent decades, focusing particular attention on U.S. arms procurement and export contracting, the widespread emphasis on short-term profits and cash-flows at the expense of long-term gains, product quality and productivity. McGarrah then proposes a series of internal and government-led reforms that, he argues, would not only contribute to a revival of the competitive position of U.S. manufacturing within the world economy, but also release budget dollars for such projects as rebuilding the U.S. infrastructures for transportation, education, water resources and funding plans for a Marshall Plan revival with Third World nations. McGarrah begins by demonstrating the importance of manufacturing firms as the pivotal institutions providing for military, economic, political and social security and progress for industrialized and developing societies; also as providers of highly paid, highly skilled jobs not generated by the service industries. He then identifies the internal causes of U.S. manufacturers' decline: the ascendancy of financial and accounting executives over engineering, production and marketing executives; the dominance of a strategy for corporate growth via financial conglomeration and divestiture (making more money for fewer people), instead of making better products, just-in-time, for more people; concentrating more on controlling flows of cash than flows of materials, products and information to serve customers' needs for improvements. Turning to a discussion of external influences, McGarrah argues that the Pentagon's arms procurement and export policies for U.S. military-industrial independence, vis-a-vis other Western democratic allied nations have exacerbated problems of indolence, lost competitiveness and export markets for American manufacturers. Reform from within, McGarrah asserts, can be accomplished if companies spend less time on balance sheet ledger and paper entrepreneurship and pay more attention to democratic-participatory management (less to bureaucracies, hierarchies and special interests) in planning controlling qualities and flows of products to markets. He also advocates greater U.S. allied cooperation in funding, procurement, production and deployment of common conventional weapons. With the savings from such cooperation, the United States could then reduce Federal deficits, finance and operate a civil-industrial-university complex for advanced research and development (patterned after precedents of the U.S. agri-business-university complex), and revive the Marshall Plan to boost manufacturers' exports and enhance political and economic ties with Third World nations.

Reviews

"With the Cold War winding down and international trade competition heating up, it is essential that America redirect its energies to economic and industrial revitalizatin. Robert McGarrah's Manufacturing for the Security of the United States provides a penetrating analysis of America's current industrial malaise and lays the groundwork for sustained economic renewal."-Dr. Michael Klare Director of the Five College Program in Peace and World Security Studies Hampshire College
A professor of management with experience in the Pentagon and other parts of the government, McGarrah puts a good deal of the blame for the decline of American manufacturing on the way business people run their companies and the way the government conducts military procurement. His prescriptions for the return to competitiveness call for broader participation in management, more cooperation with allies in arms production and financing, and a Marshall Plan revival' that will help the Third World and expand American exports.-Foreign Affairs
Robert E. McGarrah's Manufacturing for the Security of the United States examines both the decline of U.S. manufacturing strengths and the political issues affecting manufacturing strategies, offering an analysis of the past, present and future of manufacturing and suggesting government-sponsored industry reforms.-The Bookwatch
"Robert E. McGarrah's Manufacturing for the Security of the United States examines both the decline of U.S. manufacturing strengths and the political issues affecting manufacturing strategies, offering an analysis of the past, present and future of manufacturing and suggesting government-sponsored industry reforms."-The Bookwatch
"A professor of management with experience in the Pentagon and other parts of the government, McGarrah puts a good deal of the blame for the decline of American manufacturing on the way business people run their companies and the way the government conducts military procurement. His prescriptions for the return to competitiveness call for broader participation in management, more cooperation with allies in arms production and financing, and a Marshall Plan revival' that will help the Third World and expand American exports."-Foreign Affairs

Author Bio

ROBERT E. McGARRAH is Professor of Management at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. He served as Assistant Director, International Research & Engineering Programs, Office of the Secretary of Defense, Vice President, Logistics Management Institute for U.S. defense procurement policies, Assistant Director, International Division, U.S. General Accounting Office and as consultant on production-operations management for major U.S. manufacturing companies, as well as the author of numerous books and journal articles on the U.S. Goverment's and manufacturers' policies affecting productivity, corporate morale and market competitiveness.

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