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Saturday, November 10, 2007
Robert Bluey :: Townhall.com Columnist
A Bonbon for Big Labor
by Robert Bluey
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Free trade has fallen on hard times in America. With commentators such as CNN's Lou Dobbs promoting protectionism and liberal politicians pandering to Big Labor, the tide has clearly turned.

The U.S. has enjoyed years of economic growth resulting from liberalized trade. Since the late 1990s, gross domestic product has increased nearly 40 percent, and jobs have grown by 13 percent. Now, however, repeated attacks on free trade -- mostly from liberal politicians, but some from conservative quarters as well -- threaten significant economic damage.

At a time when the world is becoming smaller every day, it seems only logical to tear down walls rather than build new ones. But legislation making its way through Congress would erect new barriers, costing the U.S. government millions and doing American workers no favors.

The Trade and Globalization Assistance Act was supposed to be a modest patch to the Trade Adjustment Assistance job-training program administered by the Department of Labor since 1962. This program helps workers who wind up losing their jobs due to trade pacts get the training they need to find new jobs. But thanks in part to the clout of unions, House Ways and Means Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-N.Y.) has turned the measure into a boon for Big Labor and an assault on free trade. The legislation prompted a strongly worded veto threat from the White House, citing both the high cost and vast scope of the bill as reasons for rejecting the measure.

Doubtless the administration is doubly disappointed with the current bill because it was originally intended to renew the president's Trade Promotion Authority (which expired June 30) in return for the modest “patch.” However the TPA renewal is no longer in the mix. In its stead are provisions that help the administration advance only one trade deal: the Peru Free Trade Agreement. The House approved that pact on Thursday, 285-132. But similar deals with Colombia, Panama and South Korea are languishing without any sign they'll win congressional approval.

How did the administration get stuck with such a bad deal? Growing hostility toward free trade has prompted many Democrats who espoused trade liberalization during the Clinton administration to question whether deals such as the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) are good for the United States.

Those attitudes are fueled largely by political pressure from Big Labor. Despite a sound U.S. economy and historically low unemployment rate of 4.7 percent, liberals have swallowed the union-made Kool-Aid and embraced the claim that free trade hurts the middle class. In fact, the contrary is true. Research from the Institute for International Economics shows that the typical (middle class) family of four saves around $10,000 per year, thanks to the lower tariffs that result from free trade. And there’s a bonus. Because their money goes further due to trade-lowered pricing, families are able to buy more, triggering economic growth and creating new jobs.

Yet despite the well-known benefits of free trade, Rangel and about 40 co-sponsors were able to ram their Trade and Globalization Assistance Act through the House with little resistance. Rather than reform the current program, the new initiative makes it worse by expanding it and giving the government an even greater role. Continued...

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About The Author
Robert B. Bluey is director of the Center for Media & Public Policy at The Heritage Foundation and maintains a blog at RobertBluey.com
 
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Making stuff
edweirdness writes: "Even the most uneducated pin head recognizes "making stuff" beats the hell out of "managing a foreign company to make stuff for us". "

Oh. You mean 'talent' scout. There's an uneducated pinhead for you, and I'll bet my bottom dollar he agrees with your statement.

Which is better? Making a product at $20/hr and selling it for $25, or paying someone to make the product at $10/hr and selling it for $20?

You do the math and let me know. For extra credit, which is better for the consumer?

Once we have that clear, we'll move on to comparative advantage.

What?
Based on the running arguments regarding whether or not "manufacturing" is or isn't the basis of a solid economy, this forum is rapidly declining to a state of disservice to readers. Even the most uneducated pin head recognizes "making stuff" beats the hell out of "managing a foreign company to make stuff for us". Primarily, the fact that we are undergoing grave doubts about the state of our economy, that we are even having this discussion at all, should serve to silence those who feel that a "service based economy" is economically or socially sound or sustainable. Truly disturbing in all of this are those who assert that England, Singapore, etc,,, are all doing well. Nothing protects an economy and the interests of workers as well as an industrial base. Particularly when "service based" economies falter. These economies still require food, products and parts that will have to be obtained from those economies that still "produce goods".
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