American Mug’s production has kept four people employed and created eight more jobs here, and money from the sale of the mugs and other Indivisible merchandise will go to support Starbucks’s Create Jobs for USA Fund, which helps small businesses. “You have to start somewhere,” Mr. Honighausen said.

The unlikely partnership between Starbucks, with its 200,000 employees, and tiny American Mug grows out of the debate over outsourcing by American companies and what responsibility, if any, they bear for addressing the decline of the country’s job market.

A few companies have taken some small steps to bring lost manufacturing jobs back to American soil, driven sometimes by declining labor costs in the United States, other times by dissatisfaction with the quality of goods made abroad.

General Electric, for example, has created almost 800 jobs by building plants in Schenectady, N.Y., and Louisville, Ky., to make sophisticated batteries, some of which were previously made in China. NCR is making automated teller machines in Georgia that had also been made overseas.

Last month, Starbucks announced it would build a factory in Augusta, Ga., that would employ 140 people and make the company’s Via instant coffee and the ingredients for its popular Frappuccino drinks. About half of Starbucks’s new employment overall will come in the United States, the rest internationally.

“We are on the hunt for other domestic opportunities for products we sell and other things we do,” said Howard D. Schultz, chief executive of Starbucks. “There has to be a sense of urgency about action, and since we’re not likely to find it in Washington between now and the election, it’s time for companies and businesses to step up and find a balance between profitability and responsibility.”

The effort is not all altruistic. Chinese labor has become more expensive, and Starbucks and other companies are looking at their supply chains more holistically. American Mug can deliver to Starbucks in four days, while Chinese suppliers may take three months.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

A Chinese supplier is also likely to require an order in the hundreds of thousands, increasing the risk that Starbucks will get stuck with inventory. And then there is the difference in shipping costs. “No doubt the cost of doing what we’re doing in East Liverpool at least in the initial stage will be more expensive for Starbucks, but the investment we’re making in this is about the conscience of our company and recognition that success has to be shared,” Mr. Schultz said.

Video

So far, though, evidence that companies are bringing jobs back to America is spotty at best. “I’m not sure we’re seeing a sea change,” said Gary P. Pisano, a professor at Harvard Business School. “What we need to see is manufacturing that creates new capabilities here that we didn’t have and can build on, and I don’t think we’re seeing that yet.”

The business school has thrown its enormous prestige and resources behind what it calls “reinventing America,” an effort in part to persuade American businesses, many of which are led by its graduates, to take a hard look at the impact their outsourcing has had on the country’s competitiveness.

“One of our concerns is that as we lose certain capabilities in manufacturing, we are also losing highly innovative processes,” Professor Pisano said. “If a company does its manufacturing in China, its suppliers are going to locate in China and then a lot of the innovation that grows out of those businesses and creates new jobs is going to happen there and not here.”

Newsletter Sign Up Continue reading the main story Please verify you're not a robot by clicking the box. Invalid email address. Please re-enter. You must select a newsletter to subscribe to. Sign Up You will receive emails containing news content , updates and promotions from The New York Times. You may opt-out at any time. You agree to receive occasional updates and special offers for The New York Times's products and services. Thank you for subscribing. An error has occurred. Please try again later. View all New York Times newsletters.

To be sure, pottery manufacturing is not the kind of high-octane business Mr. Pisano envisions when he thinks about how to restore American competitiveness. American Mug and Stein uses much the same manufacturing techniques it did 90 years ago, relying on molds and casting, finishing and glazing that are done by hand.

The factory, where the temperature stays at 90 degrees to ensure the products dry properly, feels Dickensian. Shards of broken pottery and clay dust are piled on the floors, and products are pulled by employees along a monorail to various stations in the four-story factory.

“I was surprised I got into this town without a passport,” Mr. Honighausen said. “It looked like a third-world country.”

Since he started his company in 1987, most of the manufacturing is done overseas, in Europe and more recently in China, where pottery making is a highly automated process.

A tiny factory in Gifu, Japan, for instance, can turn out 7,000 mugs a day with just eight employees, two of whom are charged with attaching the handles that are supplied by another manufacturer. That’s 10 times the number American Mug can produce using the same number of employees.

Advertisement Continue reading the main story

He found American Mug last fall after having heard an interview with Mr. Schultz, in which the Starbucks chief, disgusted with the political standoff in Washington over raising the debt ceiling, called on business leaders to stop making donations to politicians and start doing something themselves to address the country’s woes.

“It was a good kick in the pants for me,” Mr. Honighausen said. “I thought, ‘Let’s just do it.’ ”

He first considered building a factory in Northern California, close to his base of operations, but a business contact who makes decals used to apply decoration to pottery suggested that he instead take a look at what might be available in East Liverpool.

Now, not only is American Mug on its second order for Starbucks, but Mr. McClellan has gone into business with Mr. Honighausen and one of his longtime associates, Kazuharu Kato, who manufactures pottery in Japan and China. They bought a pottery factory and have plans to hire 10 to 15 people once they get it up and running sometime later this year. Called the Red Barn, it will use state-of-the-art machinery like that used in Mr. Kato’s factories in Japan and China, enabling it to turn out mugs and eventually other products by the thousands each day.

Christina Bishop is one of the new employees hired by American Mug. Ms. Bishop said the local economy was “tough” and added, “There really aren’t any jobs available here that pay enough for you to afford to have a family.” Her husband, Eric, was out of work for six months before also landing a job at American Mug.

Many of East Liverpool’s 11,000 residents work at the casinos across the Ohio River in West Virginia or at the Pittsburgh airport, about a 40-minute drive away. The East Liverpool school district is the town’s largest employer. The Homer Laughlin China Company, the other pottery still operating there, employs 200 to 300 workers.

“Even seeing a few jobs created is very exciting,” said Ryan Estell, the city manager of East Liverpool. “That someone noticed there is something more here than just machines, that there are also skills and know-how here, is important for us.”