<p>since this is the season for newspaper articles about college grads having difficulties finding good jobs, I thought some might find this interesting</p>
<p>"But the new hiring also reflects another emerging reality of U.S. manufacturing: Many of the jobs dont pay anything close to what they used to. Assembly-line workers who will be making the EdenPure products under the auspices of Suarez Corp. Industries will start at $7.50 an hour.</p>
<p>Thats a far cry from the $20 an hour that most workers made with Hoover, which shifted its century-old production lines to Mexico and El Paso in 2007 after concluding that it was too expensive to make its products in the industrial Midwest."</p>
<p>"Economists say the recovery in manufacturing work is also crucial to the fortunes of the vast majority of American workers who are not college graduates. As a group, factory jobs pay about 10 percent more on average than other jobs in the economy.</p>
<p>But even as manufacturers have been prospering and jobs have begun to trickle back, some analysts and union leaders worry that workers are not sharing fully in the bounty."</p>