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475 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 9 (1984)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0475 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

The sluggish economy has drawn attention to plant closures and their conse-
quences. In actuality, corporate disinvestment in U.S. manufacturing establishments
is not a new phenomenon attributable solely to the recent recession. To the contrary,
shutdowns are dramatically visible outcroppings in the restructuring of the Ameri-
can economy. Rural industrialization is largely a residual vestige of an era in
American economic history that is drawing to an end. In addition, many corpora-
tions are shifting their manufacturing activities to locations outside of the United
States or are divesting them altogether. Those that retain their manufacturing lines
in the United States are frequently operating in highly competitive markets and are
therefore unstable firms that locate in rural areas to reduce the cost-price ratio.
Shutdowns are a predictable consequence of this process of economic succession.
Thus, serious questions are raised regarding the relationship between the state, the
economy, and the welfare of workers and communities.
In this issue of The Annals attention is focused on three aspects of the deindus-
trialization debate: the nature of the restructuring, its effects on workers and
communities, and alternative policy options to deal with economic restructuring. In
addition, two articles are included that describe recent experiences in Sweden and
Britain and provide a comparative perspective that enlightens our consideration of
the U.S. involvement in the restructuring of the world economy.
RESTRUCTURING THE ECONOMY
Capital mobility is the sine qua non of economic development, according to
many economists. Without the freedom to invest, disinvest, and reinvest, capital
cannot be used efficiently in the pursuit of its highest use value. Its movement from
sector to sector and region to region must be unrestrained in order to ensure
economic progress through a process Joseph Schumpeter referred to as creative
destruction. More recently, economic analysts such as Lester Thurow argue that
America's economic malaise is the result of too little capital mobility, not too much.
Critics argue that the free flow of capital investments continually engenders the
desertion of some areas, spatially and sectorally, while opening new areas of
production. The result is a continual restructuring of the economy, the territorial
division of labor, and the local social structures to the benefit of owners of capital
and at the expense of workers and communities.
In today's world economy, the movement of capital and the accompanying
restructuring processes have little regard for national boundaries. Capital markets
clearly are international. Their operation is producing a new international division
of labor in which production of goods-especially labor-intensive production
processes-is being shifted from advanced industrial nations, such as the United
States, to less-developed and nearly developed nations. These international shifts
also are restructuring the domestic economy, which is apparent in the relative
decline of manufacturuing. It is this diminution of the traditional strength of
manufacturing that is popularly referred to as deindustrialization.

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