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Tech innovation is more likely than tariffs to revive the manufacturing sector. Chinese manufacturing has hurt the sector, but it's not the only cause of the decline, according to Goldman Sachs ...
The company laid off around 1% of its total workforce, or around 140 employees. It's the third round of cuts since the start of 2024.
President Trump has reaffirmed his commitment to putting American manufacturing workers first by increasing tariffs on Canadian aluminum and steel, while globalist special interest groups are oppos… ...
The state’s chief manufacturing officer is leaving his job to go into higher education. Paul Lavoie, Connecticut’s chief manufacturing officer, has been appointed as the University of New ...
Texas Instruments has announced plans to invest more than $60 billion on semiconductor manufacturing in the US. The money will be allocated to building or expanding seven large-scale fabs in Texas ...
The U.S. invested in EV battery plants. Now they may be stranded. As EV sales slow and Republicans take aim at tax credits, the United States’ manufacturing renaissance is on hold.
BASF announced on June 17, 2025 that it has opened a good manufacturing practice (GMP) facility in Wyandotte, Mich. as part of the company’s commitment to providing a reliable supply of bioprocessing ...
Texas Instruments said Wednesday it plans to invest over $60 billion in U.S. chip production, making it the latest chipmaker to announce funds earmarked for domestic facilities as President Donald ...
Following a disappointing performance from the company’s CAR-T candidate in an early-stage cancer trial, BioNTech is winding down cell therapy manufacturing at its inaugural U.S. plant.
Dozens of companies have pledged to build more manufacturing in the U.S. since President Trump took office. Generic drugmakers aren’t among them. And they have no plans to change that anytime soon.
Monroeville manufacturing company expands with state backing, aims to grow industry in region Quincey Reese | Thursday, June 12, 2025 3:49 p.m.
Micron Technology plans to invest more than $200 billion in semiconductor manufacturing in the U.S., a move it estimates will create roughly 90,000 direct and indirect jobs.