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47

www.read-wca.com

Wire & Cable ASIA – March/April 2013

That is the steady growth of a small business – Marlin

Steel Wire Products – which only six years ago was facing

closure. The company is located in a state and city which

both have suffered devastating losses. Nearly half of

Maryland’s manufacturing jobs vanished over the past

three decades; in Baltimore, the drop was 80 per cent.

Yet, as reported by Jamie Smith Hopkins in the

Baltimore

Sun

, Marlin Steel Wire Products has bucked the tide,

with conspicuous success. The firm has 35 employees,

up from 20 five years ago. Its revenues of $4.4 million in

2011 were up 33 per cent from 2008, enough to place it at

No 4,112 on the Inc Magazine list of the 5,000

fastest-growing privately owned companies in the United

States. The owner, Drew Greenblatt, was hoping for revenue

of $5.5 to $6 million for 2012; and, in Ms Hopkins’s view,

this was not an implausible expectation. (“Fast-Growing

Local Manufacturer? Yes, It Is Possible,” 30

th

November).

When Mr Greenblatt bought the company, in 1998, it

employed 18 people and made wire baskets for bagel

shops, then proliferating across the country. Having

moved it from Brooklyn, New York, to Baltimore, he was

overtaken by events. Chinese factories started selling bagel

baskets for less than Marlin could purchase its steel, let

alone manufacture its product. Mr Greenblatt told the Sun:

“We were haemorrhaging cash.” Then Marlin Steel

Wire Products changed course. About four years into

its Baltimore phase, a Boeing engineer approached

the company with a request for a basket that would

hold an airplane part. It would command a much

higher price than bagel baskets fetched. According to

Mr Greenblatt, the solution to his problems came to him in a

mantra-like flash: “quality engineered quick.”

Ms Hopkins brought the Marlin story up to date. Taking a

company with measuring tools no more high-tech than tape

measures – “where plus-or-minus one bagel was a perfectly

acceptable variation in basket size” – Mr Greenblatt now

sells to customers needing accuracy down to one-4,000

th

inch. These days, reported the

Sun

, the company employs

mechanical engineers and skilled craftsmen, and has more

than $3.5 million in robotics.

The upward course of Marlin Steel Wire has produced

better-paying jobs for its people. When the company

was purchased 14 years ago, its workers earned

minimum wage with no health benefits. Now, with five

per cent of the corporate labour budget going to worker

education, annual pay on the factory floor – excluding

the degreed engineers – ranges from $30,000 to

$80,000. And everyone is eligible for health insurance.

In addition to a highly skilled workforce and cutting-edge

automation, Drew Greenblatt credits Marlin Steel’s

good fortune to a drive to sell far beyond US borders.

The company has customers in 36 countries, including

China, and its owner claims to relish competition.

In 2011 he testified in Congress in support of the

US-Korea Free Trade Agreement that would do away

with tariffs that add to his costs of selling to his South

Korean customers.

Ms Hopkins noted that free-trade deals are always

contentious, as are some of the Maryland-specific

changes suggested by Mr Greenblatt. But his attitude

resonates with the Manufacturers’ Alliance of Maryland,

which lobbies for the sector and has seen a blurring of

the distinction between small and big manufacturers

over the past decade or two. “It’s global competition,”

the trade group’s president, Gene Burner, told the

Sun

,

with the Internet making it easier for “the little guys” to

sell to South Korea and for South Korea to sell to those

companies’ customers. “Whether you’re big or whether

you’re small, it’s still global.”

Its image in need of burnishing, Apple

says it will be bringing at least some

production back to the US from Asia

“The Mac is coming back to America, but it’s unclear

whether Apple’s decision to manufacture one line of

computers at home is a serious shift in corporate strategy

or a much-needed PR adjustment.” In fact,

Politico

seemed

quite clear about its own views on 6

th

December news

that Apple Inc would again manufacture computers in the

United States. The Washington-centred political journalism

site summarised the “growing rap sheet” on the consumer

electronics giant whose chief executive, Timothy D Cook,

said that, beginning in 2013, the company “will do one of

[its] existing Mac lines” in the United States:

The Justice Department says Apple tried to fix e-book

prices; the company depends on cheap Chinese labour to

turn big profits; and Apple, like many global firms, is holding

billions in cash overseas. Apple has even taken a hit in the

stock market: a few months ago, it peaked at over $700 per

share but opened [6

th

December] under $550 per share – a

drop of more than 20 per cent. (“‘Made in USA’ Polishes

Apple’s Image,” 6

th

December).

Apple, the biggest company in the world by market value,

moved most of its manufacturing to Asia in the late 1990s.

Ever since, the action has prompted resentment as an

injustice to American workers and taxpayers. In an October

debate on the campaign trail, President Barack Obama

and his rival Mitt Romney clashed over the question

of why the iPhone and iPad are not made in America.

Mr Obama has repeatedly raised the point-of-production

issue with Apple. At one meeting, according to

Politico

, he

pressed Steve Jobs, the since-deceased Apple co-founder

and visionary chief executive, on the subject of what it

would take for Apple to resume production in the US.

Mr Jobs said that the work would not be coming back.

Now, Mr Jobs’s successor has said that Apple will

spend $100 million to engage contract manufacturers

in the US this year. The company provided no details,

including which line of its Mac computer will be made in

the US and what that might mean for American workers.

Jared Bernstein, a former economic adviser to the White

House and now a senior fellow at the Center on Budget

and Policy Priorities, offered a recommendation: “Let’s

not pop the champagne corks just yet.”

Technology

Whether or not Apple Inc manages to convince a

dubious American public of its purity of intention in

returning “home”, the company can report success on

another front.