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Smith Faculty
Opinion Article |
December 6,
2006 |
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor of
International Business
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Confronting China to Save Free Trade,
and More
Since the end of World War II, the
United States has promoted free trade in
the General Agreement on Tariffs and
Trade, the World Trade Organization, and
regional agreements like the North
American Free Trade Agreement.
The objective is to promote growth by
encouraging trade based on comparative
advantage. The logic: let national
economies specialize in what they do
best, higher productivity and lower
prices will follow, and everyone can
live better.
Now, thanks in significant measure to
resistance from developing countries led
by China, India and Brazil, the Doha
Round of WTO negotiations is almost
certain to fail. President Bush faces
tough resistance in Congress to new
trade agreements with Latin American and
Asian countries.
The reasons are simple. China is
doing well playing by mercantilist rules
and other developing countries see it.
Trade agreements are destroying more
good paying jobs than they are creating
for many ordinary Americans.
In the United States, the current
free trade regime is creating peculiar,
unintended inequalities. Large U.S.
multinationals can grow their profits
more rapidly by investing in highly
protected foreign markets like China and
India than by building new facilities in
California and Indiana. This creates
high paying jobs for business and law
school graduates that manage globalized
enterprises; however, it pushes many
ordinary Americans, whose jobs are
outsourced, into low paying jobs waiting
tables in restaurants and cleaning
offices.
Annually, the United States exports
about $1500 billion in goods and
services, and this finances a like
amount of imports. So moving workers
from import-competing to export
industries pushes up GDP by about $160
billion, thanks to higher productivity
in export industries. However, U.S.
imports exceed exports by an additional
$800 billion, and many workers released
from making those imports go into
activities that do not compete in trade,
where productivity is at least 50
percent lower. That slashes GDP by $400
to $500 billion.
Netting out the effects of the trade
deficit, free trade is pushing down GDP
by at least $250 billion annually, and
those losses are mostly visited on
ordinary workers. It is easy to see why
workers displaced by imports are getting
jobs that pay less, and Congressmen
representing them are getting heat about
approving new free trade agreements.
The root causes are badly negotiated
agreements the United States has opened
its markets more than its trading
partners and opportunities for currency
manipulation, unforeseen when the
western economies moved away from a
system of fixed exchange rates in the
1970s, permit some countries to
accomplish unfair advantages if their
aggressive actions go unanswered.
U.S. trading partners in Asia have
suppressed the values of their
currencies against the dollar and the
euro, maintain very high tariffs,
imposed arcane regulations on foreign
investors, and have perfected various
mercantilist devices to create a $435
billion annual trade surplus with the
United States.
Annually, China prints and sells more
than $200 billion worth of yuan in
foreign exchange markets to keep its
currency and goods cheap in U.S. and
European markets. Other Asian
governments must follow similar
strategies, lest their exports become
uncompetitive against Chinese products.
The Bush Administration reasons,
China will eventually conclude these
practices do not serve its self interest
and quit them, because western
economists theorize that printing so
many yuan will create inflation in China
and protectionism will undermine growth.
Unfortunately, China has figured out
how to make mercantilism work like no
other nation since 18th Century France.
While growth slows to less than about 2
percent a year and inflation remains a
nagging problem in the United States,
growth rocks along at 10 percent and
inflation at about 2 percent in China.
Chinas strategy is simple. It
subsidizes exports into western
countries open markets while locking out
imports, tightly regulating foreign
investment and permitting the theft of
intellectual property on a scale the
Dalton Brothers would envy. If the
United States and EU behaved as China
does, China would not be enjoying the
success it does. If fact, unemployment
would likely break the Communist Party's
grasp on power.
Instead, as the United States touts
market reforms and free trade around the
globe, developing countries look at
China with amazement and aspire to its
accomplishments. At home, U.S. workers
are losing good jobs and confidence in
free market policies they have just
elected a democratic majority to
Congress with decidedly left-leaning,
anti-business leadership.
Six years of Bush Administration
diplomacy have failed to convince China
to change, and the only option left to
the United States is to impose tariffs
on trade with China to offset the unfair
advantages its currency and trade
protectionism have created. Yet, anyone
who proposes such a policy is branded a
protectionist by the Bush
Administration, large multinational
corporations, and the business press.
Unfortunately, if the United States
does not confront Chinese mercantilism
directly, China will never change, and
free trade will surely be the casualty.
Developing countries will emulate Chinas
example, and populist politicians will
turn American voters away from the
market deregulation and pro-growth
strategies that have served so well
since Jimmy Carter and Ronald Reagan.
Stagnation will follow as surely as
the night follows day, and keeping free
trade alive will be the least of our
problems.
Peter Morici is a professor at the
University of Maryland School of Business
and former Chief Economist at the U.S.
International Trade Commission.
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