Importing Products Or Exporting Jobs
Michael Curtis
[November, 2011]
What do you think? Is the U.S. exporting jobs to China? In 2010
Americans bought $292 billion worth of products from China, and the
Chinese only bought $55 billion worth of products from the U.S. That's
$237 billion dollars worth of difference from China alone.
Does free trade, or restricted trade, or no trade most help the
American Worker. Let us explore the question. There really is no
significant segment of the population who will say: I am a
Protectionist, and there really are no Free Traders. Those who say I'm
for Free Trade mean: If other countries let their people buy from us
we should let our people buy from them. Some people are for Fair Free
Trade. They say: we should let our people buy from other countries an
amount equal to the amount that people from other countries actually
do buy from us.
What I am going to explain is that an excess of imports does not
result in a reduction in the demand for American labor. That
international trade, no matter how cheap the price of foreign products
are, does not lower wages or cause unemployment. That protection,
meaning tariffs, quotas, and export subsidies, cannot increase the
total number of jobs or raise the general level of wages, and neither
can free trade.
In recent years it has been the World Trade Organization (W.T.O.)
that has negotiated the General Agreement on Tariffs & Trade. It's
an organization who's members include representatives from 153
countries. Some are big like the U.S. and some are small like Belgium.
China was not initially a member, and Russia still isn't. The World
Trade Organization has 3 components. 1. The mutual reduction in trade
barriers; 2. Rules for foreign investment & financial services
like banks and insurance companies with customers in other countries.
And 3. The enforcement of each other's patents and copy rights within
the federation.
Does The World Trade Organization represent the consumers of each
nation? Is it about creating the opportunity for consumers to buy at
the cheapest possible price? Or, is The W.T.O. an organization of
corporations and the governments that represent them in the process of
negotiating the opening of each other's markets and investment
opportunities?
In order to be a member in good standing, no nation may restrict the
sale of foreign products, unless there is scientific evidence that it
poses a health or safety risk to the consumers or the environment
based on a standard negotiated by the representatives of 153 nations.
And compliance is judged by a panel of arbitrators. So, for example:
If the French government decided that English beef might have been be
unsafe due to the possibility of Mad Cow Disease, it would have had to
appeal to the W.T.O. judges for a ruling or be in violation of the
agreement with stiff penalties. The United States can ban the use of
certain pesticides, but it cannot unilaterally ban food that has been
sprayed with those same pesticides in other countries. In other words,
no member nation has the right to decide for itself what products are
safe for its own people, and remain a member of The World Trade
Organization. The United States requires its fisherman to use special
equipment which protects Sea Turtles and Dolphins when catching shrimp
and Tuna fish, but under the W.T.O. rules it cannot prohibit the
importation of shrimp and Tuna fish, which were caught along with Sea
Turtles and Dolphins unless the W.T.O. changes the rules.
The W.T.O. Representatives say it is broadening democracy. Its
detractors say that the U.S. is not all that democratic, given the
amount of money, and the outcome of recent elections, but many of
those 153 countries are oligarchies and modern day Despotisms which in
no way represent their people.
In addition to imported products, The W.T.O. regulates foreign
investments and intellectual property rights, which make it a multi
faceted and enormously complex agreement with thousands of pages. But,
if we focus Just on trading products there is a big difference between
negotiating access to foreign markets with universal standards of
health, safety and the environment, and an independent country which
allows its people the freedom to trade legal products with the people
of other nations.
Many Environmentalists, Humanitarians, and Labor Unionists are
against both the World Trade Organization Agreement and the concept of
Free Trade.
The last 3 Presidents (our current president sounding more like a
Fair Trader) and until the recession, the majority of Congress
contended that Free Trade creates jobs, increases production, and
raises wages. While the advocates of labor contend that Free Trade
exports jobs, lowers wages, and causes unemployment. We know that a
large number of High Wage union manufacturing jobs have been lost.
Many of the workers have accepted far lower paying jobs, and many are
still unemployed. And the critics of free trade say: those jobs were
lost and those workers had to accept lower wages because of Free
Trade; because of cheaper Imports. The U. S. imported nearly $668
billion worth of products in excess of that which it exported last
year.
Ironic as it may seem, one thing that all sides agree on, whether
it's the President and Congress or the advocates of labor is that the
more a nation exports above and beyond the amount it Imports the more
it contributes to our national prosperity. And this we call a"
Favorable Balance of Trade". Well, if that is true, what would
give us the highest possible level of prosperity? The logical answer
is to Import nothing and export everything.
In Henry George's day (1883) Ireland exported far more than it
imported. The absentee landlords lived on the exports to England. In
our generation it's countries like those in Central America that have
probably exported a whole lot more than they imported over the last
100 years. With banana, coffee, and sugar plantations owned by
American companies a lot of the fruit that went to the U.S.
represented the profits of the companies. Therefore, nothing was
exported from the U.S. to those countries in exchange. What can we say
about the rate of wages in Central America?
Just to set the stage: in America, tariffs were a major source of
revenue for the national government, following the ratification of the
constitution and its establishment in 1789. Tariffs were raised and
lowered many times over the years, with a multitude of different rates
for different products. On more than one occasion they averaged nearly
50% during the 19th century and seemed to fluctuate wildly depending
on which party controlled congress. This continued until 1913 when
they began to shift in favor of the income tax.
However, as a means of protecting American industries, the tariff
remained a powerful force which went from an average of 38% to a peak
of 53% following the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. It was
dramatically cut during the Roosevelt years, and by 1963 it was all
the way down to an average of 12%. From the middle of the 1970s to the
middle of the 1980s there were increases in protection, but they took
the form of Quotas. Only a certain number of each foreign product was
allowed in every year. Cars and steel were among the big ones. Under
the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade in operation before the
World Trade Organization was established, these quotas were
substituted for tariffs, and were scheduled to be phased out over the
next ten years.
Today (2010), there are different rates for different products with
an average tariff of just 1.3% for all imports. Automobiles are 2.5%,
steel is less than 1%, and coffee is free. However, clothing is still
between 16 & 32%, and sneakers are 48%. Orange Juice is 33%, while
peanuts and sugar are taxed so much per pound and subject to a grossly
higher rate after a certain quota is reached. Most products from
Mexico and Canada have no tariffs under N.A.F.T.A., the North American
Free Trade Agreement.
Many of the corporations that were in the past advocates of
protection have established facilities in other countries and are now
sending goods to the United States. Tariffs diminish their profits, so
they've reversed their positions and are now in favor of free trade.
At the same time America is still loosing many smaller industries such
as canned mushrooms and cut flowers.
Last year the U.S. produced around $14.5 Trillion worth of goods and
services. The U.S. imported around $1.9 trillion, worth of things,
which means about 13% of what was consumed in the U.S. was produced in
other countries. The U.S. only exported around $1.2 trillion worth of
things. That leaves a $668 billion dollar Trade imbalance, or deficit,
which is equal to about 4.6% of the G.D.P.
Returning to the question: Why do we want to trade with the people of
other nations? Could it be for the same reason we want to trade with
the people of our own nation -- to satisfy our desires with less
exertion. The diversity of nature impels people to trade. Everything
does not grow equally well in all parts of the world; minerals are not
found in equal abundance everywhere in the world.
In the words of Henry George: "...as there are differences
between individuals which fit them for different branches of
production, so, but to a much greater degree, are there such
differences between communities. Not to speak again of the differences
due to situation and natural facilities, some things can be produced
with greater relative advantage where population is sparse, others
where it is dense, and differences in industrial development, in
habits, customs and related occupations, produce differences in
relative adaptation.
Such gains, moreover, as attend the division of labor between
individuals, attend also the division of labor between communities,
and lead to that localization of industry which causes different
places to become noted for different industries. Wherever the
production of some special thing becomes the leading industry, skill
is more easily acquired, and is carried to a higher pitch, supplies
are most readily procured, auxiliary and correlative occupations grow
up, and a larger scale of production leads to the employment of more
efficient methods. Thus in the natural development of society trade
brings about differentiation's of industry between communities as
between individuals, and with similar benefits."
I'm thinking of: The chemical Industry in Wilmington Delaware or the
Autos in Detroit or Watches made in Switzerland. By trading, we enable
each nation to produce that for which it is best equipped. We multiply
the total body of knowledge and skill, increase the potential from
economies of scale, and disperse the regional peculiarities of nature
to everyone.
Tariffs are probably as old as any tax, because trade is the most
significant way that human beings increase the results of individual
exertions. Tariffs must be an irresistible source of revenue. A Sales
Tax is simply a Domestic Tariff.
What is different about a protective tariff is the way it
discriminates against foreign products and distorts the incentives. It
rewards people who divert their labor and capital from producing the
things they make most efficiently to producing things in which people
of other nations are more efficient. And in the process they diminish
the total production of the country. With a protective tariff, says
Henry George, we attempt to do to ourselves in time of peace what we
do to our enemies with a blockade in time of war; we prevent desirable
products from entering the country. That is exactly what was done with
the blockade of Iraq and the Embargo on Cuba.
The effect of protection is to raise prices. Therefore, In terms of
what you can buy, protection reduces wages, which its advocates claim
it will raise. None-the-less, we shall see how the protective tariff
works, and who actually profits from it. Let's say, hypothetically, we
levied a tariff on cars, and the price of cars went up until the
return on every dollar invested in the production of cars increased by
5%. What do other American investors do, continue producing food,
gasoline, and office buildings for the standard return, or do they
start making cars in pursuit of the higher return? They may buy stock
in existing companies, or start their own. Doesn't investment always
seeks the path of the highest return? When the supply of cars
increases due to the fact that more people are building them, what
will then happen to the price of cars? The supply of cars will
increase until the profits from making cars are no greater than the
profits from growing wheat, making gasoline, or office buildings. Of
course the existing car companies have the organization, know-how, and
the patents, but others will make cars until their profits are no
greater than they would be making other products. Although the profits
from producing a protected product may be no higher, protected
products will still cost more if the domestic producers are less
efficient or the cost of their materials are higher, which is why we
bought foreign products in the first place.
Now, by contrast, suppose a tariff is raised on foreign steel. What
will happen to the price, and the demand for American steel? It goes
up. As the price of domestic steel increases, what then happens to the
demand for, and the production of American land containing iron ore?
Since land cannot be produced, the price remains higher. That is, as
long as it doesn't diminish equally the demand for iron to be used in
export products made with steel. No one can produce a mineral or any
other natural resource. The same thing applies to any monopoly.
Suppose we put a tariff on German steel that's being exchanged for
American wheat. As Americans make more steel, the rent of land that
contains iron ore increases. But since they traded wheat for steel,
they now grow less wheat and the rent of land that grows wheat
decreases. However, since Americans grew wheat more efficiently than
they made steel, the total production of the country is diminished.
Let me reiterate: The more a nation discourages imports, the more it
discourages exports. What one group of land owners gains from reducing
imports, another group of land owners looses from a corresponding
reduction in the demand for exports. However, by impeding trade, both
countries give up some portion of the natural, cultural, and
scientific advantages possessed by the other country, and their total
production falls.
Even if one country could produce everything more efficiently than
other country it would still be mutually profitable for them to trade.
Take for example, two carpenters. Suppose a first class carpenter
could do every job faster than a second class carpenter. He could saw
boards, hammer nails, even sweep the floor one tenth faster. However,
he could figure the pitch of the roof, frame the windows, and hang the
doors ten times faster. By dividing the jobs, with the first class
carpenter doing the most difficult they could build two houses much
more than twice as fast as either one of them could have built one
house. Even if the U.S. could produce every single product more
efficiently than Mexico both countries could still benefit from
trading. By exchanging Blue Jeans for computer programs, the Mexicans
might get more computer programs than they could have produced with
the same amount of labor and capital, while the Americans, by trading
computer programs for Blue Jeans, might get more Blue Jeans than they
could have produced with an equal amount of labor and capital. And
this is known as the law of comparative advantage.
Before we go on, let us explore the belief that low paid labor
necessarily means a cheap cost of production. If that were true, we
would expect to find the cheapest cost of production in countries
where wages are generally the lowest. A comparison of the United
States and Mexico from 2006 lists the U.S. worker, on average,
producing nearly $70,000 per year, while the Mexican worker, on
average, is only producing about $18,000. That is between three and
four times as much per worker.
However, that does not account for the grossly greater capital
investment per person in the United States, which certainly accounts
for most of the higher productivity. Without knowing how much of the
G.D.P. went to the owners of capital (tools, buildings, machinery) we
don't really know where the cost of production is cheaper. However,
without any statistics, we have a good idea where land rents are
higher. It's the United States.
The lower the cost of production, the higher the rental value of
land. If we take the total amount that is produced within a country,
and we subtract everything that is paid to all the workers; all the
owners of buildings, machinery, and inventories; all those with
patients and other monopolies; and taxes, what is left is the unearned
income from the ownership of land. This is also true of each
individual parcel of land, and a projection of this income sets the
selling value of each parcel. So, in which countries do we find the
highest land values, those with the lowest wages or those with the
highest wages? Ironically, the cheapest cost of production is found in
high wage countries like the U.S. and Japan.
If the United States has a lower cost of production, why did so many
American companies buy land in Mexico and other countries? Why have
they invested in China? While the cost of production in the U.S. may
still be lower, their ratio of future profits to the price of land may
look -- may have looked -- like a better long-term investment. Their
infrastructure is evolving with new highways and communications
systems, freer markets and freer trade. In the last decade Mexico has
more than doubled its productivity per worker. China is increasing
productivity at a phenomenal rate.
Coming back to the American workers, what do they say to all this?
They say Yes, We have heard it all before -- trade is a two way
street, but, this year alone, Americans bought 668 Billion dollars
worth of cheap foreign products for which America didn't exporting
anything in exchange. How long before the American worker has to
accept the same subsistence wage that the vast majority of other
people are getting all over the world. We know that they aren't giving
those products away, and we know they only take money because it will
buy valuable products in the future, but what about the $668 Billion
dollars worth of products that aren't made by or exchanged for the
products of American workers every year. What about all the factory
workers that are either unemployed or working for half of what they
used to make, while Americans are buying products from other
countries.
Well, for the first 30 out of the last 60 years the U.S. exported
more than it imported. For the last 30 years it imported more than it
exported. It seems like some countries always export more than they
import and visa versa. How do we explain the imbalance of trade? The
first way is for people from other countries to make investments in
the U.S. let's say that Japanese products went to the United States,
but instead of buying American products and taking them back to Japan,
they bought American assets and left them here. It could be an
automobile factory or a cattle ranch or Urban Real Estate. It could be
corporate stocks or Government bonds or it could include money in
American banks.
You sell a product in the U.S. and you simply put the money in an
American bank. Before the recession it was rumored that people in
other countries had a claim on more than half of all the U.S. dollars
in American banks. That could account for billions and billions of
dollars worth of foreign products. You could write a check and buy
anything from anywhere in the world, but only if the money buys an
American product, and only if that product leaves the U.S. does it
count as an Export.
The second way for imports to exceed exports is for investors from
the U.S. to take profits from previous investments in other countries.
If Americans invested heavily in China during past years, many of the
products which come to the U.S. will simply represent profits from
those previous investments. Nothing will be given in exchange; their
will be no corresponding export. For example: Suppose Cell phones are
made in China and sold in the U.S. The money is put in a U.S. bank.
The New Yorker who previously bought stock in the cell phone company
receives a check written on the U.S. bank as a dividend from the
company. There is no export in the amount of the check, so it adds to
the trade deficit. However, if the stock holder spends the money in a
NY restaurant, in effect, cell phones were traded for dinners.
Of course the credits from one country account for a lot of what is
used to buy products from other countries, so, there is no way to tell
from the imports and exports between any two countries alone, whether
an imbalance means there is investing or profit taking, or an
imbalance that was settled with products from a 3rd country. we can
see from the statistics that foreign investments in the US
totaled almost $2.4 trillion while US investments in foreign
countries totaled over $3.3 trillion, according to Wikipedia. That
would suggest that some of the accumulated trade deficits totaling
$7.75 Trillion since the1960s were profits from previous investments
by Americans in other countries.
However to fully understand the effects of a "Favorable Balance
of Trade" where a nation exports more than it imports, let us
imagine what would happen if we stopped imports entirely. There are
some exports that would continue to leave the country in spite of it.
They would include products bought with American money spent by
Americans living in other countries, like tourists and American
military personal. It would include products purchased by people in
other countries who received American money as a gift or inheritance.
This would include money sent home by foreign workers, and It would
include Foreign aid, which buys American products. The Marshall Plan
increased American exports in the same way. However, the largest value
of products that would continue to leave the country would be those
which represent the returns from stocks, bonds, and real estate owned
by people who live in other countries.
It can be seen that some of those exports, which result from previous
investments are compensation for an increase in productivity. They
yield a net gain to the national economy, and some of them represent a
pure drain on our national wealth. Productive investment vs. monopoly
profit. Suppose the interest on bonds which built part of the
Interstate Highway system amounted to $200 billion a year, but the
same part of the highway system increased the Gross Domestic Product
of the United States by $400 billion a year. This would be good for
the United States and the foreign investor, both. Trading imports for
the construction of auto factories and steel mills could also benefit
the people of both countries. However, by contrast, suppose that
foreigners owned some of our mineral land. They take the raw materials
or the products they exchange for them, and they send nothing back to
the United States. It is a pure drain on the national assets. And the
same thing applies to agricultural and urban land, including the land
under an auto factory and a steel mill.
What if, instead of buying the land, it was taken with an army, we
would call it Imperialism or Colonialism, but when a foreigner buys
your land it's called Foreign Capital Investment, and it is generally
thought to be a good thing and often sought by governments. One group
of people produce, and another group of people in another country
consume, and it is called an Export and a favorable balance of trade.
But, If the same relationship is present within one country we don't
count the imbalance of trade at all. None the less, one person
produces and another person consumes, and that is the real problem we
ought to be trying to fix. And neither protection or Free Trade can
stop it.
Clearly, Protection can't create jobs and it can't raise wages. The
number of jobs in any country is simply a matter of physics. The more
land that is accessible to labor and capital, the more job
opportunities are created. It is on the land we live, and from it we
grow our food and make our products. You can't export a job, because
you can't export the land. Shutting down a factory and refusing to
sell to the highest bidder who wants to use the land, even if the
offer is only a dollar, is what adds to unemployment.
Not only has the W.T.O. agreement removed all considerations of
health, safety, and the environment as well as questions of morality
much further from the people, but there is nothing to be gained by
doing so. All impediments to trade simply diminish production. In the
short run, we should simply apply to products coming into the country
the same rules that apply to products produced within the country. We
should unilaterally institute Free Trade, and we don't need trade
agreements to do it.
However, with every advance in technology, every extension of the
infra structure, and every increase in population the value of the
land tends to increase; people tend to hold it as an appreciating
asset. As long as it is profitable to speculate in land we will have
some segment of our population unemployed. In fact, as freer trade
increases production it also increases the value of land. And this
increase encourages some land owners not to sell. As the population
increases; as machines replace workers, more land has to come into
production. So, to repeat, the degree to which the supply of land
meets the need for land determines the level of employment.
Freer trade can no more reduce unemployment than the steam engine and
the rail road, the automobile or the computer; it simply increases
production. Are not Wages determined by the legal Min. Wage and the
supply and demand for superior, better educated, higher skilled
workers needed to maximize production? So, in the long run, free trade
cannot create jobs, nor can it raise wages.
Only after there is free land, which can only result from an end to
land speculation, can Free Trade, which does raise production, also
raise wages and the return to productive capital. At present, most
taxes are based on domestic trade. Labor is exchanged for money; it is
taxed. Money is exchanged for a product of labor; the value of the
product and or the profit which results from the transaction is taxed.
By supporting the government with the rental value of land all
production and trade would be free of taxation and trade restrictions
and landholders would have to use their land fully or give it to
someone who would -- for the rent would have to be paid, whether the
land was used or not. The effect would give all people equal access to
the natural opportunities with no taxes on trade or any other form of
production. This Henry George called: True Free Trade. As long as the
rental value of land is collected by society land will have no selling
price. Therefore, all foreign investment would be productive capital,
which results in mutual benefit for the people of both countries.
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