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Smith
Faculty Opinion Article
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July 30,
2007
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By Dr. Peter Morici, Professor
of International Business
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Globalization and
Inequality
Globalization is an ancient process.
Since fire and the wheel, people have
been finding better ways to make
products and transport them more
cheaply. Commerce has widened, wealth
has increased, and winners and losers
have patterned the competitive
landscape. How well a nation and its
citizens do depends on how skillfully
leaders manage the process.
In the 19th century, mechanization
and the Erie Canal multiplied the
productivity of the Midwestern granary
and opened its bounty to East Coast and
foreign markets. International commerce
drove down the price of bread in Great
Britain, diminished its landed
aristocracy, and forced workers on
country estates to seek factory jobs in
the cities, where engineers were making
British workers among the most
productive in the world.
For a time, aristocrats persuaded
Parliament to respond to grain imports
with the Corn Laws, but eventually
common sense prevailed, and Britain
embraced global commerce. England
prospered through much of the 19th
century, exporting manufactures and
importing food and raw materials.
A lesson for our time? Not
necessarily.
For free trade to work, nations must
be able to export what they make more
efficiently than their trading partners.
By swapping jobs in importing-competing
industries for those in export
activities, the United States increases
productivity for those workers by about
10 percent. Hence, by exporting some
$1.5 trillion annually and using the
proceeds to buy imports, trade raises
U.S. GDP about $150 billion.
Unfortunately, the United States has
not been conducting trade quite that
way. Since George Bush took office,
annual imports have climbed $834 billion
but exports are up only $441 billion.
The trade deficit has swelled to $750
billion.
Instead of redeploying displaced
autoworkers to computer chip factories,
those workers find jobs in restaurants
or hotels, where productivity and wages
are lower. That reduces GDP by about
$250 billion, and wipes out the $150
billion gains from trade noted above.
Despite remarkable improvements in
productivity, many American workers face
stagnant wages or cant keep up with
inflation. Too many are forced by trade
out of jobs offering good pay and
benefits.
Export juggernauts, like China and
India, maintain undervalued currencies
against the dollar and give
manufacturers tax rebates and other
subsidies that make their exports
artificially cheap, and U.S. products
artificially expensive in their markets.
Further, they exclude competitive
American products, for example, by
forcing companies like Ford to make cars
in China to sell cars in China.
Each year, Chinas private sector
sells $230 billion more in the United
States than its consumers buy from
Americans, and Chinas government spends
more than $300 billion on U.S.
securities and stakes in foreign
companies. Those purchases push down
U.S. mortgage and other interest rates,
and U.S. workers, struggling to keep up
with rising prices on stagnating
incomes, borrow to maintain their
standard of living.
What China, India and others do is
clearly protectionist, and violates the
rules and norms of the World Trade
Organization.
Trade and globalization are not the
issue; rather, the rules of trade and
terms of globalization are the problem.
Right now, China, India and others break
the rules of trade with impunity, and
the U.S. workers are getting a raw deal.
Not every American is hurt. Big
stockholders in U.S. multinationals
setting up shop in China, and the
lawyers, Wall Street financiers and
highly educated professionals that help
them are doing just fine. They see the
debate raging in Congress about how to
respond to China as threatening to their
aristocratic privilege.
Many Democrats in Congress and Wall
Street bankers seeking refuge from a
backlash against trade want to make the
income taxes more progressive, to put a
few extra dollars in workers take home
pay, and to offer workers booted by
trade cash payments. Those are
palliatives and do not address the
systemic ills that make most Americans
poorer.
Several bills are working through
Congress that would permit U.S.
businesses and workers harmed by
currency manipulation, and other
subsidized imports from China and other
places, to obtain import tariffs that
precisely offset the unfair advantages
created by those industrial policies.
Such tariffs are not protectionist.
They merely neutralize unfair advantages
given to foreign competitors by
governments. When the subsidies stopped,
so too would the tariffs.
Americans workers can compete on a
level playing field, and a good job
beats heck out of government largess.
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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