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-------- Original Message --------

Manufacturing & Technology News
June 15, 2007    Volume 14, No. 11

The Truth Comes Out About Outsourcing

BY PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS



On January 6, 2004, Senator Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) and I scandalized 
the economics profession and Washington policymakers with our New York 
Times article, "Second Thoughts on Free Trade." We noted that the two 
conditions on which the case for free trade rests no longer exist in the 
present-day world and that there was no basis for the assumption that 
offshoring of U.S. jobs was beneficial overall to Americans.

The Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C., organized a conference, 
televised by C-Span, to subject our argument to peer review, and we 
easily dominated the conference. Business Week (March 22, 2004) was 
receptive to a column from me explaining the adverse effects of 
offshoring, and Tim Aeppel at the Wall Street Journal organized an 
online debate between myself and Columbia University trade theorist 
Jagdish Bhagwati.

Aeppel hoped to test the validity of my points in the crucible of debate 
with a leading academic proponent of offshoring. However, Bhagwati 
evaded my argument and threatened to withdraw his participation if my 
reference to the latest work in trade theory by Ralph Gomory and William 
Baumol was included in the edited version of our debate in the Wall 
Street Journal (May 10, 2004). "In Global Trade and Conflicting National 
Interests" published in 2000 by the MIT Press, Gomory and Baumol show 
that the case for free trade is a special case and had never been one of 
general validity. Their criticism is more far-reaching than the one made 
by me and Senator Schumer.

Professor Bhagwati's skill in evading my argument told most people who 
read the edited version of our debate that he could not answer me. 
Obviously, all was not well with the establishment's contentment with 
offshoring and "globalism."

Paul Samuelson, in many respects the dean of American economists, wrote 
an article supportive of Gomory and Baumol's work. But nothing happened. 
Economists simply closed ranks and ignored the points that I brought to 
their attention as well as the latest work in trade theory. Libertarian 
free trade ideologues got upset with me. Unable to deny that the case 
for free trade had lost its necessary foundations, libertarians reduced 
the issue to one of economic freedom and concluded that I was impure.

Since 2004 I have written a number of articles pointing out that 
offshoring is really labor arbitrage and that if offshoring had the 
mutual economic benefits associated with free trade, there would be U.S. 
employment growth in export and import-competitive industries. Instead, 
employment in these industries has declined in the U.S. but grown 
remarkably in Asia.

In the 21st century, the U.S. economy has been able to create net new 
jobs only in non-tradable domestic services, such as waitresses and 
bartenders and health and social services. Moreover, the growth in 
productivity and GDP attributed to the U.S. economy were inconsistent 
with the stagnant real incomes of Americans. Somehow productivity and 
GDP were growing strongly, but it wasn't showing up in the incomes of 
Americans.

Economists have found it difficult to think about the issues that I have 
raised. Economists are taught that free trade is a good thing and that 
anyone who disputes it is a protectionist in the pay of some industry 
scheming to raise prices that consumers have to pay. The notion that 
there could be any problem with free trade is beyond the imagination of 
most economists.

In addition to their unexamined commitment to free trade, economists 
disbelieved my analysis because they thought it was inconsistent with 
statistics indicating high U.S. productivity and GDP growth. They 
thought GDP and productivity statistics trumped my use of job data.

All of this may be about to change. Susan Houseman, a good but 
previously obscure economist with the Upjohn Institute, has discovered a 
problem in the statistical data that produces phantom U.S. GDP. Phantom 
GDP results when cost reductions achieved by U.S. firms shifting 
production offshore are miscounted as U.S. GDP growth. Phantom 
productivity increases occur when gains from moving design, research and 
development offshore are counted as increases in U.S. productivity. 
Obviously, production and productivity that take place abroad are not 
part of our domestic economy.

Business Week's June 18 cover story by Michael Mandel explains the 
problem identified by Houseman. Economist Matthew Slaughter, a proponent 
of offshoring, says: "There are potentially big implications. I worry 
about how pervasive this is." Business Week says the implications are 
big. The cover story estimates that 40 percent of the gain in U.S. 
manufacturing output since 2003 is phantom GDP.

Most likely, that estimate is low. Consider, for example, that furniture 
imports have doubled in the past few years (offshored production counts 
as imports) while U.S. jobs in furniture manufacture have declined 21 
percent. U.S. statistics, however, show that U.S. output and 
productivity rose even as U.S. manufacturers closed their plants and no 
new investment went into the industry.

My hat is off to Business Week. It requires courage for a publication 
dependent on advertising from global corporations to tell the truth 
about offshoring.

-- Dr. Roberts is an economist who has held numerous university 
appointments and served as Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Treasury.


-- 
Darryl McMahon
It's your planet.  If you won't look after it, who will?

The Emperor's New Hydrogen Economy (now in print and eBook)
http://www.econogics.com/TENHE/

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