According to leaders in the manufacturing industry, the U.S. is about to experience a major manufacturing boom. And Texas stands to benefit.
“There’s never been a more exciting time to be in manufacturing,” says Douglas K. Woods, president of AMT – The Association For Manufacturing Technology, which owns and produces IMTS, The International Manufacturing Technology Show.
According to Woods in a recent manufacturing news article from IMTS, with a GDP of $30.5 trillion, the United States is the largest economy globally, and with a 2025 annualized personalized consumption expenditure of $20.8 trillion, it remains the top destination for domestic and foreign investment.
“If our $2.9 trillion U.S. manufacturing economy were measured as a country, it would rank as the eighth-largest country in the world,” says Woods. He also notes that foreign direct investment exceeded $275 billion in 2024, and since January 2025, new investments in U.S. manufacturing, technology, and infrastructure have totaled more than $8 trillion.
Strong manufacturing sector growth usually has a powerful ripple effect across many parts of the economy. Here are the industries that typically benefit the most:
Manufacturing growth increases:
Stronger manufacturing boosts:
Manufacturing is highly energy-intensive, especially in:
A surge in:
Manufacturing increases demand for:
Growth spills into:
Manufacturing growth drives:
Stronger manufacturing often correlates with:
More manufacturers means:
Driven by regulatory and ESG pressures:
In our next post, we’ll provide a Texas-focused explanation of how industries benefit from manufacturing growth within the broader U.S. economic cycle, and how Texas, industrial real estate, and construction law stand to benefit.
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