Notes for Free Traders
Paul Craig Roberts
Friday, March 7, 2003
In a recent cover story, Business Week magazine observed that
economists haven't begun to fathom the implications of outsourcing for the
U.S. economy. Economists don't understand globalism because they don't think
about it. They simply assume globalism to be the beneficial workings of free
trade.
Most economists take for granted that the benefits of free trade
offset its costs. For example, the lower prices consumers pay for imports
give more benefit than the harm done to the workers who lose their jobs in
inefficient domestic industries. Any questioning of globalism raises the
specter of protection -- the prevention of resources from flowing to their
highest valued use.
If a New York company can outsource its 1-800 call center to a
lower-wage state, why not to India? If a Floridian can freely trade with a
Georgian, why not with the Chinese? If a person can run an indefinite trade
deficit with his local supermarket, why does it matter if a country runs the
same endless deficit with its trading partners?
All of these rhetorical questions (and many more) can be found
in the Economists' Book of Mantras. Economists use these questions to
reassure themselves so that they don't have to think.
Let's ask a new question: Is outsourcing trade?
What is being traded when a U.S. firm or industry relocates its
capital and technology in China, where it employs Chinese labor to produce
goods for the U.S. market?
Adam Smith's argument for free trade is an argument against
self-sufficiency in all goods and services. It is not an argument for
exporting a country's productive capability to countries with the lowest
labor costs.
In the Smithian model, countries have different endowments.
Differing climates give advantages to the production of different crops.
Differing histories and inclinations result in different advantages in
finance, skills and manufacturing. If each country specializes in areas
where its advantages are greatest or disadvantages are least, the gains from
trade will make each country better off than it would be if it remained
self-sufficient.
But if there are no given endowments because business know-how,
capital and technology are globally mobile, the advantage lies with
countries with untapped pools of educated and skilled low-wage labor. The
advantage increases with the absence of tort lawyer extortions and harassing
and fining IRS, EPA, OSHA, EEOC and other regulatory bureaucracies, whose
budgets demand a never-ending supply of wrongdoers to be penalized.
To return to the question: Where is the trade in outsourcing?
Trade implies reciprocity. It is a two-way street. There is no
reciprocity in outsourcing, only the export of domestic jobs. That's why the
United States is currently running a $125 billion trade deficit with China
alone, a Third World country. That's why the United States is turning over
$1.5 billion per day in its accumulated wealth to pay for all the outsourced
goods and services that return to our markets as imports.
One reason that trade between countries is not the same as trade
within a country is that more than one currency is involved. A country that
runs persistent trade deficits dispossesses itself of its wealth and the
future income that flows to the new owners of that wealth.
A second blow falls when foreigners find themselves satiated
with dollars, or overweight U.S. investments. Then the dollar devalues, and
the outsourced goods and services on which the U.S. is import-dependent
become expensive.
An economy can, of course, stand some outsourcing. But when
goods and services in general are outsourced, where is the economy?
The enormous untapped labor pools in China, India, Indonesia and
the Philippines exceed in size the U.S. population. They are sufficiently
large to hold down living standards and wages in those countries until all
U.S. manufacturing and information technology jobs have been outsourced in
order to boost corporate profits.
A country devoid of high productivity jobs is a poor country. Is
the United States on the outsourced path to becoming a Third World country?
The Bush administration should think about this question before
it gratuitously attacks Iraq. The consequences of war in the Middle East are
unknown.
The Bush administration should also think about the rapid rate
at which outsourcing is dispossessing the United States of its accumulated
assets, including the domestic supply chains that are the backbone of
American productivity. How long will foreigners accept an annual outpouring
of $500 billion before they force a devaluation of the dollar? What becomes
of the living standard of a people whose jobs and careers have been
outsourced, people who are dependent on imported goods and services, and
whose currency loses its value?
Protection is not a solution. Protection is a strategy to
protect domestic producers from foreign ones. But U.S. global firms and
firms whose profits benefit from outsourcing are not domestic producers.
Protection would require the United States to erect tariff and quota walls
against the products of U.S. firms who use foreign labor to produce for U.S.
markets.
Do Americans possess enough national identity to have a shared
national interest? Are government and economists capable of recognizing
that the global labor market is a threat to U.S. living standards and
political stability?
To find out more about Paul Craig Roberts, and read features by
other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators
Syndicate web page at www.creators.com.
Dr. Roberts' latest book, "The Tyranny of Good Intentions," has been published by Prima Publishers.
Copyright 2002 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
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