Obama highlighting manufacturing gains in Indiana visit

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Boosted by the lowest jobless rate in six years, President Barack Obama is expected to put a manufacturing focus on his revived economic message Friday during a visit to Indiana, calling attention to industrial gains that have helped restore some higher-wage jobs during the recovery from the Great Recession.

Obama was to visit a steel manufacturer Friday in Princeton as part of a new fall political campaign push to promote his pocketbook policies and to claim credit for the upturn in the economy. He's announcing a competition to create a manufacturing innovation institute concentrated on photonics, or the use of light in technology ranging from lasers to telecommunications.

Friday's attention to manufacturing jobs comes on the same day the government reported that U.S. employers added 248,000 jobs in September, lowering the unemployment rate to 6-year low of 5.9 percent.

The visit also falls on the third annual observance of National Manufacturing Day and a day after Obama called the November elections a referendum on his economic policies.

Focus on manufacturing

The U.S. economy has created 700,000 manufacturing jobs since its low point of 11.45 million jobs in February 2010. Manufacturing jobs are considered crucial because they tend to be higher paying than many of the jobs created during the recovery. Many industry advocates side with the Obama administration on issues such as overhauling immigration laws and spending more on infrastructure projects but criticize some of his environmental regulatory measures as too onerous.

The manufacturing sector is nowhere near where it was at its peak in 1979 and early 1980 when it accounted for more than 19 million jobs. Between 2000 and the beginning of 2009, the sector lost nearly 5 million jobs.

Steel company

Millennium Steel Services, located about 30 miles north of Evansville, is a minority-owned company created in 2001 as a joint venture with Toyota to supply automotive grade steel sheets to the automaker's Indiana plant and to other auto parts makers.

Millennium helps Obama illustrate his case that in helping rescue General Motors and Chrysler, he also buttressed the broader auto industry and its ancillary industries. Obama planned to hold a town hall-styled question-and-answer session with company employees where he was sure to tout efforts by the administration to create manufacturing hubs and innovation institutes.

The $200 million innovation project the president is announcing Friday is a Defense Department effort carried out in conjunction with the private sector.

The president is promoting pocketbook issues as the campaign for congressional elections enters its final month. Obama is walking a fine line between bullish assurances that the recovery is real and acknowledgement that millions of Americans are still jobless or underemployed and not benefiting from the economic gains. In a speech Thursday at Northwestern University he said that while he is not running for re-election, the policies he has promoted will be tested on Election Day. "These policies are on the ballot, every single one of them," he said.

Jobs numbers

The Labor Department's Friday morning report showed that U.S. employers added 69,000 more jobs in July and August than the government had previously estimated.

The number of unemployed fell in September by 329,000, to 9.3 million. Most of them found jobs last month. But nearly 100,000 stopped looking for work, lowering the percentage of Americans working or looking for work to 62.7 percent, the lowest proportion since February 1978.

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