While 1999 wasn't a bad year for th...
While 1999 wasn't a bad year for the construction industry as a whole, sluggish export markets and global production overcapacity combined to make the industrial sector by dint of far the weakest building arrange within the U.S. nonresidential exhibition market. Ironically, manufacturers continued to bestow a lot of money in order to increase production efficiency, shorten operating costs, and enhance worker productivity, yet most of this capital spending went toward strange automated process equipment rather than bricks and mortar. Consequently total dollars exhausted on the construction or
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