President-elect Donald J. Trump and Vice President-elect Mike Pence will announce a deal with Carrier Corporation on Thursday to keep 1,000 jobs in Indiana from moving to Mexico.

The deal with the company, which included a multiyear $7 million incentive package from the state and promises by Mr. Trump and Mr. Pence to work for lower corporate taxes over all, is good news for the workers in Indiana, but the jobs that will stay represent only a small boost compared with the millions of manufacturing jobs lost since 2000.

U.S. manufacturing jobs 2000 17,284,000 2010 11,460,000 ↓ 34% since 2000 2016 12,338,000 ↑ 8% since 2010 A loss of five million since 2000

Manufacturing jobs in the United States have declined significantly since the end of the 1990s, though output has increased with new technology. Since their lowest point in 2010 during the recession, jobs have rebounded slightly but have not recovered.

The 1,000 Carrier jobs represent just 0.2 percent of all Indiana manufacturing jobs, which have rebounded at a higher rate since 2010 than all U.S. manufacturing jobs.

Indiana manufacturing jobs 2000 665,000 2010 435,000 ↓ 35% since 2000 2016 518,000 ↑ 19% since 2010 A loss of 147,000 since 2000

About 300,000 private-sector jobs have been added in Indiana since the recession. But nearly three-quarters of them have been in the service sector, where jobs pay an average of $39,338 a year, compared with $59,029 in manufacturing.