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Wednesday, April 16, 2008
Walter E. Williams :: Townhall.com Columnist
Foreign Trade Angst
by Walter E. Williams
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Presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama, pandering to anti-trade activists, suggest that should they become president, they will restrict trade agreements. Before you buy into their promised paradise, there are a few trade questions you might consider.

Suppose you were choosing a country to live in. Which country would you prefer: a country that has the world champing at the bit to put its money into or one where the world is unwilling to invest? Let's look at the numbers.

The United States is the world's largest recipient of foreign direct investment. According the Economic Report of the President, in 2004, foreigners owned $5.5 trillion in U.S. assets and had $2.3 trillion in sales. They produced $515 billion of goods and services, accounting for 5.7 percent of total U.S. private output, and employed 5.1 million workers, or 4.7 percent of the U.S. workforce in 2004. According to the Congressional Research Service, in 2006 alone, foreign investors spent $184 billion investing in U.S. businesses and real estate, the highest amount foreign investors have spent since 2000. My question to Clinton, Obama and the anti-trade lobby is, would Americans be better off if there were no foreign investment in our country?

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, between 1996 and 2006, about 15 million jobs were lost and 17 million created each year. That's an annual net creation of 2 million jobs. Roughly 3 percent of the jobs lost were a result of foreign competition. Most were lost because of technology, domestic competition and changes in consumer tastes.

Some of the gain in jobs is a result of "insourcing". Foreign companies, such as Nissan, Honda, Nokia, and Novartis, set up plants, hire American workers and pay them wages higher than the national average. According to Dartmouth College professor Matthew Slaughter, "insourced" jobs paid a salary 32 percent higher than the average U.S. salary. So here's my question to anti-traders: If "outsourcing" is harmful to the U.S., it must also be harmful to European countries and Japan; would you advise them to take their jobs back home?

Wal-Mart has become the whipping boy for political demagogues, unions and anti-traders. I suggest that they have the wrong target. The correct target is revealed by answering the question: "Why does Wal-Mart exist and prosper?" Wal-Mart exists and prospers because tens of millions of Americans find Wal-Mart to be a suitable source of goods and services. Clinton, Obama, unions and anti-traders should direct their outrage and condemnation at the tens of millions of Americans who shop at Wal-Mart and keep it in business.

There's great angst over the loss of manufacturing jobs. The number of U.S. manufacturing jobs has fallen, and it's mainly a result of technological innovation, and it's a worldwide phenomenon. Daniel W. Drezner, professor of political science at the University of Chicago, in "The Outsourcing Bogeyman" (Foreign Affairs, May/June 2004), notes that U.S. manufacturing employment between 1995 and 2002 fell by 11 percent. Globally, manufacturing job loss averaged 11 percent. China lost 15 percent of its manufacturing jobs, 4.5 million manufacturing jobs compared with the loss of 3.1 million in the U.S. Job loss is the trend among the top 10 manufacturing countries who produce 75 percent of the world's manufacturing output (the U.S., Japan, Germany, China, Britain, France, Italy, Korea, Canada and Mexico).

But guess what -- globally, manufacturing output rose by 30 percent during the same period. According to research by the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, U.S. manufacturing output increased by 100 percent between 1987 and today. Technological progress and innovation is the primary cause for the decrease in manufacturing jobs. Should we save manufacturing jobs by outlawing labor-saving equipment and technology?

Economist Joseph Schumpeter referred to this process witnessed in market economies as "creative destruction," where technology, innovation and trade destroy some jobs while creating others. While the process works hardships on some people, any attempt to impede the process will make all of us worse off.

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About The Author
Dr. Williams serves on the faculty of George Mason University as John M. Olin Distinguished Professor of Economics and is the author of More Liberty Means Less Government: Our Founders Knew This Well.
 
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Adam Smith also made a HUGE omission
As noted decentralist Ralph Borsodi pointed out, Adam Smith failed to understand that the gains of centralized mass production are lost in the costs of distribution. Accordingly, whenever possible, decentralization and self-sufficiency are vastly preferrable to centralization. This is especially true with political power.
Every last one of us human individual critters (who isn't a liar) wants to get paid as much as possible for his own time, labor and products, while simultaneously paying as little as possible ("free" is better yet) for the "other guy's" time, labor and products. I call that empirically observable phenomenon "The Producer-Consumer Glitch".
Hence the popularity of all the products sold by WalMart courtesy of all the little Chinese slave girls (only partially a metaphor) in a "free" market.
The Producer-Consumer Glitch cannot be solved by the stupid-human pecking order most commonly known by the euphemism "government", the pretend-to-be-altruistic desires of government-coercion-based "legal-tender" currency-speculation advocates and apologists notwithstanding. It can only be solved by culture-wide individual Golden Rule morality combined with adequate education of all children in the subjects of economics, politics and law — something transnational "globalist" (aka "ruling-class") government schools will NEVER teach them — which is part of the reason school choice is an absolute and uncompromisable prerequisite for individual freedom.

Walter's HUGE omission
What Dr. Williams omitted is what the substance of the medium of exchange needs to be in a free market economy for it to function properly, and, as such as Roger Sherman and Thomas Paine wrote about, how absolutely evil and destructive legal tender laws inherently are to "reciprocal justice between man and man" (female gender included).
It is provable that the Supremes lied about the money of account of the United States in Legal Tender Cases (Knox v. Lee, Parker v. Davis), 79 U.S. (12 Wallace) 457 (1870) and Juilliard v. Greenman, 110 U.S. 421 (1884). Compare those revisionist-history lies to the truth of Hepburn v. Griswold 75 U.S. (8 Wallace) 606 (Feb 7, 1870) before Grant had packed the Court on behalf of big banking. You may look up those decisions and read them for yourself at http://supreme.justia.com/us/ or http://www.findlaw.com/casecode/supreme.html.
"America:Freedom to Fascism" (at http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-16568803038673901 73) and "The Money Masters" (http://www.informationliberation.com/?id=8702) are relevant to the subject.
When all the countries of the world have "funny money" legal tender, the only thing "free market" about what happens next is that the world's "globalist" currency-speculator class uses the coercion and manipulations of the various governments to force the working classes of the various countries to bid against each other for who will produce goods for the entire world for the lowest possible price.
Sorry, Dr. Williams, but that's NOT a free market!
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