Key Points

President Trump is urging foreign companies to not just invest in the US but also bring their expert personnel to train American workers. He specifically wants training in complex manufacturing like semiconductors and shipbuilding where the US has lost expertise. Trump argues this knowledge transfer is essential for long-term industrial strength and maintaining foreign investment. The remarks come amid US efforts to boost domestic manufacturing through protective tariffs and policies.

Key Points: Trump Urges Foreign Companies Train US Workers in High-Tech Manufacturing

  • Trump emphasizes need for knowledge transfer from foreign experts to US workers
  • Calls for training in semiconductors, shipbuilding and high-tech machinery
  • Cites US decline from building one ship daily to barely one yearly
  • Says this approach prevents disincentivizing foreign investment into America
3 min read

Trump urges foreign companies not to just invest in US but also train American workers

President Trump calls on foreign investors to bring expert personnel to train American workers in semiconductors, shipbuilding, and advanced manufacturing for long-term industrial strength.

"I want them to bring their people of expertise to teach and train our people how to make these very unique and complex products - Donald Trump"

Washington, September 15

US President Donald Trump on Sunday (local time) has called on foreign companies not only to invest in the US but also to bring in expert personnel to help train American workers in manufacturing complex and high-tech products, in which the companies are involved.

In a statement posted on Truth Social, Trump emphasised the need for the US to relearn advanced manufacturing skills, especially in industries like semiconductors, shipbuilding, and high-tech machinery, by learning directly from foreign companies that are making large-scale investments in the country.

"When Foreign Companies who are building extremely complex products, machines, and various other "things," come into the United States with massive Investments, I want them to bring their people of expertise for a period of time to teach and train our people how to make these very unique and complex products, as they phase out of our Country, and back into their land," Trump said.

The US President argued that this type of knowledge transfer is essential to ensuring the long-term benefits of foreign investment and to restoring American industrial strength.

"If we didn't do this, all of that massive Investment will never come in the first place -- Chips, Semiconductors, Computers, Ships, Trains, and so many other products that we have to learn from others how to make, or, in many cases, relearn, because we used to be great at it, but not anymore," he added.

Citing shipbuilding as a key example, Trump said the US had once built a ship a day but now "barely builds a ship a year."

He argued that allowing expert workers from abroad to help rebuild American know-how temporarily would lead to long-term independence and even excellence.

"I don't want to frighten off or disincentivize Investment into America by outside Countries or Companies. We welcome them, we welcome their employees, and we are willing to proudly say we will learn from them, and do even better than them at their own "game," sometime into the not too distant future!" his post read.

The remark comes as the United States pushes to boost its domestic manufacturing sector and calls for manufacturers to invest in the US amid the global economic concerns due to the tariffs imposed by Washington on certain countries.

Earlier this month, Trump stated that certain companies are choosing to build their products in the US to avoid these tariffs and benefit from its protective policies, pointing towards the companies, especially car manufacturers, from China, Mexico, and Canada.

"Thousands of companies are coming into the US... Traditionally, car companies... They are coming from China, Mexico, Canada... They want to build here because, number one, they like to be here, and number two, the tariffs are protecting them. And number three, they want to avoid paying tariffs. When you build their cars here, you don't have any tariffs," he stated during a press conference at the White House.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
Interesting how the US is now looking to learn from others. For decades they've been the teachers. This humility could actually benefit their manufacturing sector. Hope they implement this properly without protectionist policies.
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Michael C
As someone who works in tech manufacturing, this makes sense. The knowledge gap in advanced semiconductor manufacturing is real. Temporary knowledge transfer could help rebuild American capabilities.
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Ananya R
The shipbuilding example hits hard. India has also seen traditional skills disappear. Maybe we should have similar programs to preserve and transfer indigenous manufacturing knowledge. 🛳️
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Sarah B
While the intent is good, I worry about the "phase out of our country" part. This could lead to exploitation of foreign experts who train Americans and then are sent back. Needs proper safeguards.
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Vikram M
Good strategy but implementation will be key. India's manufacturing sector has grown because we embraced both foreign investment AND skill development. The US can learn from our model. 💪

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