The United Nations updated its National Accounts Main Aggregates Database
today with data for 2011. The chart above compares the annual
manufacturing output of the US and China from 1970 to 2011 measured in
current US dollars. Before 2004, the United Nations only reported
“Mining, Manufacturing and Utilities” for China, so the comparison above
is for that measure of manufacturing in both countries, rather than
just “manufacturing.”
In 2010, the manufacturing output
of both countries was almost exactly equal, with China at $2.373
trillion and the US at $2.365 trillion. But in 2011, China’s
manufacturing output surged by 23% while manufacturing output in the
U.S. only increased by 2.8%. That brought China’s manufacturing output
last year to more than $2.9 trillion, which was almost half a trillion
dollars (and 20%) more manufacturing output than the $2.43 trillion of
manufacturing output that was produced in the U.S. last year.
Looking at just manufacturing
(without mining and utilities) in 2011, China’s factories produced $2.34
trillion of output, which was 23% higher than factory output in the US
at $1.9 trillion.
Bottom Line: In
2010 the U.S. and China produced roughly the same amount of
manufacturing output, but in 2011 China clearly overtook the U.S. to
become the world’s largest manufacturer. America’s long reign as the
world’s No. 1 manufacturer has finally come to an end. I’ll provide
more charts and analysis on the new updated database in subsequent
posts.
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