March 8, 2026

‘Blue-Collar Boom’ Is a Bust

022420-03-Economy-Trump
'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust
President Donald Trump speaks at the Shell Pennsylvania Petrochemicals Complex in Monaca, Pennsylvania on Aug. 13, 2019. (Photo: Nicholas Kamm/AFP/Getty Images)

Trump’s claims of a reinvigorated economy are mostly bogus.


'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

By Judd Lounsbury


โ€œThis American carnage stops right here and stops right now.โ€

That was the big line from Donald Trumpโ€™s Inauguration address, describing a dystopian United States with โ€œrusted-out factories scattered like tombstones across the landscape,โ€ due to bad trade deals that encouraged outsourcing.

The newly installed President promised to โ€œbring back our jobsโ€ by negotiating better deals that โ€œbenefit American workers and American families.โ€

What a difference three short years of Trump has broughtโ€”at least, according to Trump. In his State of the Union speech on February 4, he called the U.S. economy the โ€œbest it has ever been,โ€ saying heโ€™s created a โ€œblue-collar boomโ€ where โ€œcompanies are not leaving; they are coming back to the USA.โ€ Moreover, he crowed, โ€œAfter decades of flat and falling incomes, wages are rising fast,โ€ especially for low income workers. 

In Trumpโ€™s mind, Americaโ€™s corporate executives have sheepishly boarded up their Chinese and Mexican plants as one rust belt factory after another turns its lights back on and workers dust off the name plates on their old lockers. Itโ€™s like turning Billy Joelโ€™s grim โ€œAllentownโ€ into a scene from the 1986 comedy Gung Ho. Problem solved!

In reality (a realm the President avoids as much as possible), the economy has continued on a straight trajectory from what Trump inherited from President Barack Obama.   

Yes, wages are indeed going up, according to the Bureau of Labor and Statistics. But much of that is due to minimum wage increases enacted at the state and local level. As seen in the graphs below, the median wage for men has remained flat and is still less now than it was in 1979.

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

When we look at just non-college educated workersโ€”what we traditionally think of as โ€œblue collarโ€ workersโ€”the reality is even starker. Since 1979, the median wage for this group has gone down 12.3 percent.

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

Plus, observersโ€”including Quentin Fottrell of Market Watchโ€”question whether wages for any group really are going up, given the methodology used by the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Fottrell points to the Real Wage Index, which uses a more expansive set of data points and finds that, while actual wages have risen by 16 percent overall in the United States since 2006, โ€œreal wagesโ€ have fallen by 9 percent, when adjusted for inflation. 

In fact, Fottrell notes, real wages have actually declined by 1.3 percent since the end of 2017. 

Another economic indicator, the labor force participation rate, has hovered around 63 percent of the population through most of Obamaโ€™s post-Recession presidency, which is where it stands today. Nevermind that the nationโ€™s weak labor participation rate was the foundation for candidate Trumpโ€™s claim that the unemployment rate was really 43 percent.

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

In fact, as highlighted in the graph below, the United States trails behind most G7 countries in labor force participation among prime working age (25-54) adults. American exceptionalism, indeed.

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

Compounding this, there is also an alarming number of working-aged men who have checked out of the labor force entirely. Most of these men do not have college degrees; they also predominantly live in a handful of rural, low-income regions across the country:

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

And what about Trumpโ€™s claims of a return of manufacturing jobs? The reality is that there has been slow growth in the manufacturing sector, and this growth is simply a continuation of the post-recession growth rate of the Obama Administration. We still have not returned to pre-recession manufacturing job levels. But we are quite a distance from the โ€œfree trade dealโ€ era of the early 1990s, the one Trump is singularly focused on blaming for factory closures.

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

Whatโ€™s more, Trumpโ€™s claim that his โ€œnewโ€ trade deal with Canada and Mexico will create โ€œ100,000 new high-paying American auto jobsโ€ is preposterous. When you look at vehicle production forecasts, youโ€™ll notice  that GMโ€”the largest vehicle manufacturer in the United Statesโ€”will go from producing 1,999,000 vehicles in the United States in 2018 to 1,909,000 in 2020 (a 5 percent decrease), while production in Mexico will spike from 837,200 to 1,011,000 (a 21 percent increase).  

Lori Wallach, a trade expert with Public Citizen, called Trumpโ€™s claim of bringing back jobs โ€œabsurd.โ€ The best-case scenario is that improved labor and environmental regulations in Mexico will, Wallach said, โ€œreduce U.S. corporationsโ€™ incentives to outsource U.S. jobs to Mexico.โ€ And Congressman Mark Pocan, Democrat of Wisconsin and chair of the Congressional Progressive Caucus, argued that that Trumpโ€™s new trade deal is only โ€œmarginallyโ€ different than the old NAFTA and does not correct โ€œcore flaws that led to the outsourcing of hundreds of thousands of American jobs.โ€

Perhaps the best reality-check is GDP growth.  Despite Trump promising โ€œ4%, 5%, or even 6%!โ€ GDP growth, it hasnโ€™t nudged in any meaningful way and Trumpโ€™s own White House Council of Economic Advisers is forecasting more of the same-old, same-old in the future:

'Blue-Collar Boom' Is a Bust

All in all, itโ€™s clear that Trumpโ€™s economy is nothing more than a continuation of the post-recession Obama economy, gussied up with promises that things are going to get even better. 

Trump is clearly an expert at rebranding thingsโ€”whether it be the Obama economy, NAFTA, or our relationship with North Korea. But just changing what something is called does not make it different. 

The โ€œblue collar bloomโ€ is no different. Itโ€™s a baseless claim that required millions of Trumpโ€™s followers to believe he has turned the MAGA Kool-Aid into wine. But believing in the fantastic world heโ€™s created means ignoring what they actually see when they head off to work each day.


Published by Common Dreams, 02.23.2020, under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 license.