MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
Wow, what was I thinking. Yes, yes, yes, sending all those jobs overseas is SUCH a wonderful thing for our country.
Yes, let's support a company that wants to run a ship 3 miles off the coast of CA so they can bring in foreign labor, bypass tax laws, environmental concerns, immigration problems, etc... What, it will only amount to 600 IT jobs from the American job market. No big deal, this is great for the country.
Levi Strauss, Osh Gosh, all gone. Great for America! Dell and just about every other support service, all outsourced. Where is the problem? I guess we have none.
Hershey slowly moving out of the country. Oh, great for global trade!!!
Next time you take a jab at those unemployment figures, you might want to ask yourself why they're at this record high. You might also want to dig in a bit for some advice from our founding fathers. I have little doubt they're constantly turning in their graves. They offered us wisdom, but we know more than they ever did, right? They said, imports should NEVER exceed exports if you want to continue the American way of life. But I guess they were too ignorant to know what they were talking about.
Why blame free trade, which we have been increasingly doing for the recent downturn in employment? We had record low unemployment quite recently and our trade practices have not change substantially since then.
If I recall, the last time we tried substantially restricting free trade to boost our domestic economy was with the Smoot-Hawley Tarriff Act of 1930. It was passed despite an unprecedented 1,000 economists writing to the President asking him to veto it. The result was, as the economists predicted, not a boost to domestic employment but just the opposite.
I don't really know what the founding fathers, experts in government not economics, felt about international trade. Describing them as ignorant is actually pretty fair, given that they don't have the advantage of the 200 additional years of research and study in economics that we have. I do know that it was about that time that Adam Smith, David Ricardo, and David Hume first started explaining why free trade was so beneficial.
As for imports exceeding exports, I started to write an explanation showing that trade with other nations always balances once you include investment flows into the equation, but I found this article that explains it much better.
Most people seem to intuitively understand that they are better off with trade. They know that they could grow all their own food, build their own shelter, and supply their own energy, but they would be living very poorly if they did so. By focusing on the areas where they have comparative advantage with their neighbors, they can live much better. Their city could survive without trading with neighboring cities, producing everything for itself. Of course, virtually no one thinks their city would be better off for that. The same concept applies to states. Any of our states could survive on its own, but each state is better because of trade amongst the states. Rich states like Connecticut are not worse off for doing business with poorer states like Mississippi. The same principal is universal and does not stop at national boundaries.
I believe that because of free trade, we benefit from the ingenuity and labor of not just 300 million Americans. Instead, we benefit from the combined brainpower and effort of billions of people around the world. I think that we and they are much better off because we work together.
