www.chroniclesmagazine.org/2010/10/11/pernicious-myth-of-free-trade/#comments

 

Pernicious Myth of "Free Trade"

by Srdja TrifkovicА

October 11th, 2010

 

In the last week of September the House of Representatives passed legislation 
aimed at imposing trade sanctions against China unless it lets its currency 
appreciate, thereby reducing its export advantage. In a subsequent speech 
clearly aimed at China, Japan and Brazil, Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner 
attacked currency policies likely to result in “short-term distortions in favor 
of exports.” In the meantime the U.S. dollar has hit a record low against most 
major currencies.

Who is to blame? Whatever you do, Professor Douglas A. Irwin of Dartmouth 
College says in The Wall Street Journal 
<http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704696304575538573595009754.html>
 , don’t blame Free Trade. In a long feature on October 9, he bewailed the fact 
that a recent WSJ-NBC News poll found that 53 percent of the American public 
now believes that free-trade agreements have hurt America, up from 46 percent 
three years ago, and under a third in 1999. In his view, far from erecting 
trade barriers and “blaimng other countries,” we need a mix of continued free 
trade and a host of measures by the Fed to stimulate growth.

Ian Fletcher, the author of Free Trade Doesn’t Work 
<http://www.amazon.com/Free-Trade-Doesnt-Work-Replace/dp/0578048205/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1286828417&sr=8-1>
  (U.S. Business & Industry Council, 2010) begs to differ. In his view, “free 
trade” is slowly bleeding America’s economy to death and the standard economic 
arguments free traders use all the time are false. In the meantime the U.S. 
economy is hemorrhaging quality export industry jobs at an astounding rate. 
Almost half of our manufacturing workforce has disappeared since 1987 and more 
than a third of large factories just since 2001. Not coincidentally 2001 is the 
year China joined the WTO.

In the Problem section of his book, Fletcher tears apart the standard arguments 
for free trade and some of the snake-oil remedies to the US trade problem (more 
“education” etc). He suggests a “natural strategic tariff” that would level the 
playing field between US and foreign exporters in the key manufacturing and 
service export sectors. It is necessary because “free trade” is unsustainable. 
Nauru, a small Pacific island nation that had huge deposit of phosphate, opened 
up to free trade, “became one of the richest countries in the world,” and duly 
collapsed when the phosphorous soil run out. If it had not opened up to free 
trade, it would have sold its reserves of phosphate slowly, and it would not 
have collapsed. Even though free trade may result in gains, the gains are to 
the economy as a whole and not to an individual, which results in increased 
income inequality.

It is essential to distinguish between trade and “free trade,” Fletcher says. 
They are not the same thing at all. Trade brings many benefits and, properly 
reckoned, also many costs. If these are properly understood, nations have a 
reasonable hope of managing their trade so that the former exceed the latter:

Free trade means giving up this attempt at managing trade in favor of the 
19th-century laissez faire assumption that the free market, on its own, will 
automatically produce an optimal result. As we have most recently seen in the 
financial crisis, this is an unreasonable expectation in the context of 
domestic economics, and the same rule applies internationally. Under conditions 
of free trade all of the developed nations are ceasing to be competitive in 
many industries. It is nevertheless noteworthy that some highly developed 
nations like Germany and Japan continue to register huge trade surpluses 
despite the rise of China. They have done well by practicing a combination of 
mercantilism abroad and industrial policy at home. They frequently do this 
covertly, which is why nations like the US and UK, and their supposedly 
sophisticated economists, are baffled by their success. And this means 
repudiating free trade.

That is anathema to the mainstream media and global economic forums. While it 
is unsurprising that free trade is supported by big commercial companies, 
because they have benefited from it, there is no ready explanation for the fact 
that it is supported by the politicians who got their positions from the votes 
of the citizens… and then, by supporting trade liberalism, leave them without 
their jobs. So what are the powerful, supranational economic and political 
structures, which favor free trade, despite many negative effects on national 
economies of many countries? Fletcher finds the answer in the toxic combination 
of America’s campaign finance laws—which make corruption perfectly legal—and 
the shocking cultural naiveté of the American people about the benevolence of 
raw capitalism. Multinationals worldwide favor international institutions like 
the WTO because they are beyond the reach of democratic accountability and 
enable corporations to play different nations off against one another. In the 
meantime, Fletcher says, “America has ceased to be a powerful nation because 
America no longer has an industrial base. Foreign nations, starting with China, 
are not going to sell America the weaponry needed to be a superpower, even 
assuming America remains solvent enough to buy it.”

The solvency cannot be maintained, however, by re-applying the 1930’s tool of 
Keynesian reflation. Too much of America’s domestic demand leaks abroad due to 
the trade deficit, thanks largely to Clinton-era free trade agreements. In 
addition, America ran such huge budget deficits during non-recessionary times 
under Bush that the ability of the government to borrow money was wasted when 
it was not needed simply to enable politically-popular tax cuts. The trade 
crisis will force politicians to find real solutions, Fletcher concludes, clean 
or dirty as they may be: the solution, for both the developed nations and the 
Third World, is a gradual return to the moderate protectionism and domestic-led 
growth that economic history vindicates.

Germany, and by extension the rest of Germanic and Scandinavian Europe, has 
shown that developed nations need not fear the rise of Third-World competitors 
like China, so long as they do not fall prey to the delusions of free trade and 
laissez faire. It is high time America grasps the perils of such delusions. 
This is not a matter of ideological preference. It is a matter of survival.

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