Will the auto workers’ strike jeopardise Joe Biden’s manufacturing boom?
A report from the front line of America’s industrial revival
STANTON, TENNESSEE, looks like a place from a bygone age. The town hall quaintly resembles a 1960s grocery store. Next door is a cannery, where townsfolk use communal stoves to make soups and peach preserve for winter. For much of its history, Stanton’s main source of income has been cotton farming, which was so depressed that many smallholders left.
This article appeared in the Business section of the print edition under the headline “Cranes, drains and automobiles ”
Business September 30th 2023
- Will the auto workers’ strike jeopardise Joe Biden’s manufacturing boom?
- Hollywood’s strike enters its final act, as writers reach a deal
- Can Europe’s power grid cope with the green transition?
- Ties between foreign businesses and China go from bad to worse
- What if Hollywood blockbusters were remade as workplace dramas?
- Pharma’s big push for a new generation of obesity drugs
- Customer service is getting worse—and so are customers
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