In January 2009, as the U.S. economy was freezing up, employers were cutting roughly
800,000 jobs
President Obama had just taken office and a few weeks later, he headed to Elkhart, Ind., where the unemployment rate was surging to 19 percent.
The key problem: Most jobs there were tied to the production of recreational vehicles. In the depths of the Great Recession, few Americans were buying expensive RVs.
On Wednesday,
Obama returned
In 2009, the RV industry shipped 166,000 vehicles. This year,
396,400 units
"It is great to be back at Elkhart," Obama told a cheering crowd. After facing "the worst economic crisis of our lifetime," America has rebounded to prove "it's the strongest, most durable economy in the world," he said.
Wednesday also brought this encouraging news about manufacturing: The Institute for Supply Management said its monthly report on factory activity showed that of the 18 manufacturing industries covered, 12 pointed to expansion last month.
"The solid May ISM manufacturing report is further proof that the U.S. economy is picking up in the second quarter," PNC economist Gus Faucher said in an analysis. "Manufacturing should transition to a positive for U.S. growth over the rest of 2016."
The U.S. economy has been in recovery since June 2009 and continues to regain ground lost to the Great Recession. For example, a Commerce Department report on Tuesday showed that personal spending surged 1 percent in April, marking the biggest gain in nearly seven years — suggesting the economy will continue expanding quickly enough to support more manufacturing.
But critics say the White House's efforts had little to do with Elkhart's rebound. They credit cheap gas, not federal policies, with boosting RV sales.
Dan Coats, a Republican senator from Indiana, said
in a statement
Other skeptics say Obama's efforts fell far short of helping diversify Elkhart's economy. In August 2009,
Obama returned
Regardless of what caused Elkhart's rebound, U.S. manufacturing "is making a big comeback," according to Deborah Wince-Smith, CEO of the Council on Competitiveness, a nonpartisan organization of corporate CEOs, university presidents and labor leaders.
Earlier this spring, the council, working with the consulting firm of Deloitte,
issued a report
U.S. success reflects this country's "manufacturing investments, a strong energy profile, and high-quality talent, infrastructure and innovation," Deloitte concluded.
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