-Caveat Lector-

from:
http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.48/cheap_labor.htm
<A HREF="http://www.zolatimes.com/V3.48/cheap_labor.htm">Cheap Labor, by
Tibor R. Machan</A>
-----

Cheap Labor



by Tibor R. Machan

One of the complaints raised at the WTO meetings in Seattle, Washington,
echoes the accusations that have for years been leveled at Nike, Kathy Lee
Griffin, WalMart and others, all of whom have employed workers abroad who
charge far less for their labor than do workers in most Western countries,
especially in the US. It is said that it is evil to pay so little for the
work being provided and, moreover, it is unfair to other workers who have
fought long and hard to obtain better wages from their Western employers.
Now, after all this struggle and the benefits finally reaped from it,
companies are managing to escape the results by moving to countries where
wages are still low, where there is no organized labor movement, and where
other harms befall workers as well (for example, environmental destruction
via the costless dumping of wastes, wrought by the lack of legal sanctions).

It is difficult to judge these charges without actually living in the regions
of the world where labor accepts the "cheap" wages, at least cheap in
comparison to what labor gets paid in, say, Detroit or Dallas. After all,
medical care is less expensive and less up to snuff in most such regions, as
well, as is entertainment, transportation, clothing, food, furniture and the
rest. "Cheap" is not an absolute concept!

In short, in most regions of the world the quality of life is lower than in
the West. Ironically, that is largely because in most regions of the world
free trade had been either outlawed completely or curtailed severely by
governments that have ruled there. Without free trade, labor cannot organize,
wages cannot be bid up, the environment suffers, and, of course, the quality
of goods and services lags. It is hardly the fault of corporations that do
business in these regions that they need not pay more for what they get.

But to this the response is that corporations ought to, and even be made to,
pay more for the work. Curiously, on a recent TV magazine program Kathy Lee
herself said that she wished the minimum wage were higher in Central America,
where she does some business�as if she were prevented from raising wages
unless the government forced her to do so.

At any rate, there is a widespread sentiment, fueled by the likes of Ralph
Nader and Michael Moore (the man responsible for those badly made but
sentimental favorite movies with many people, Roger and Me and The Big One)
that it is the obligation of people in business to seek out badly paid
workers and raise their wages to what is confusedly called a "living wage."
I don't wish to address the basic moral issue for the time being�it is just
not possible to argue that out here. Suffice it to note that this complaint
very likely does not square with the behavior of most people�I'd bet even
those who advance it.

Consider just this much. You are in a grocery store and shop for some item,
say tea or chicken or soda pop. If you see that your preferred item comes in
both an expensive and a cheap rendition, which do you purchase? At the mall,
do you avoid the very expensive stores and the very expensive items and,
instead, look for sales or good deals? When you shop for shoes do you seek
out the most expensive if you can find more reasonably priced ones that meet
your needs? When you bid on a house, do you volunteer a higher price than the
seller is asking? How about a car�even from Korea? When considering going to
a hair dresser or barber, do you look for the most expensive place to get
this service?

I doubt that the answer is that most folks want to part with more than less
of their wealth as they make their way about the market place. It is to throw
away good opportunities�for saving for a rainy day, or being able to afford
something else�to behave in such an irresponsible fashion. People in the
market place aren't there to be charitable and that goes for everyone, not
just managers of multinational corporations. If you shopped the way the
critics expect companies to shop, your family would be outraged at your
carelessness, your lack of prudence.

But it must be remembered now that just as charity begins at home, so does
charitable wage negotiation. If you avoid the stores where goods are
expensively priced, you are putting into motion a process that leads to the
manufacturer of the goods sold there to seek out the cheaper rather than more
expensive labor, overhead and transportation. Folks who buck this trend
simply cannot attract customers and will go out of business, thus leaving
what used to be "cheap" now simply unemployed labor!

The fact is that in a free market there are better opportunities to improve
one's bargaining power than in a regimented economy. The latter relies on the
non-existent omniscience of bureaucrats to set prices, wages, and production
levels, with the result that the entire system is usually very badly
mismanaged.

Even such American academic sympathizers with socialism as John Kenneth
Galbraith and Robert Heilbroner have admitted that critics of the planned
system such as Ludwig von Mises and F. A. Hayek were completely vindicated
when the Soviet Union's socialist economy collapsed. These latter economists
have argued for decades that when there is a lack of freedom to engage in
local pricing, communication between the massive number of market agents is
impossible, so shortages and other forms of mismanagement will be inevitable.
(This is called the famous "calculation problem" of planned economies.)

Nor are heavily regulated�rather than outright planned�economies able to
escape the brunt of this criticism. There, too, bureaucrats pretend to be
able to know what people ought to want for themselves and under what terms.
But this also misfires and leaves costly wastes, all in the name of
humanitarian sentiment that lacks economic sense. (But such sentiment is a
lazy type of humanitarianism at best!)

What is fundamental so as to have a decent economic system is freedom of
trade among all the participants. This means no slave labor, no restraints on
trade by governments and criminals, no bans on labor organization and no
protectionism. The more of this, the better the likelihood of economic
opportunities of all concerned.

But freedom is not enough. Market agents will have to be alert to new ways of
doing business, new technologies and so forth. Complacency is deadly for
economic prosperity.
Sadly, however, a lot of people believe short cuts can be taken and the
flexibility economic progress requires, both in their households and on the
global economy, can be dodged by instituting government protection against com
petition. That is why so many clamor for government interference�on their
side! This goes for companies, workers, and the rest, unfortunately.

Finally, what about child labor? President Clinton proudly signed an WTO
agreement against it but even that is no help to millions who do not have the
option to enter some nice school (which Mr. Clinton dreamily envisioned)
instead of going to work. For such kids it is either some kind of work or
some level of starvation, in most cases. In some developing countries sending
a child to work can mean the difference between a reasonably solvent family
and one that is on the brink of economic collapse�which means also the
collapse of medical, educational, and various other areas of their lives.

In Hungary, as a kid of 11, I worked as a baker's assistant, getting up at
4:30 AM and then leaving the bakery for school at 8 AM, pretty run down, in
desperate need of sleep. But given that economically mismanaged society, the
alternative was for me not to work and for the family to eat far less. My
mother already had to bring soup home from work every noon since we couldn't
afford to buy any. Under such circumstances child labor is a blessing and had
it been forbidden, it would have been a back breaker for our family.

What President Clinton signed in Seattle on December 2nd is probably a back
breaker for millions of families across the globe. In the name of resentment
against corporations that make profits from the work of children, the
president and his colleagues consigned a lot of children to hopelessness.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tibor Machan, a philsopher, was interviewed by Alberto Mingardi for The
Laissez Faire City Times (http://zolatimes.com/V2.21/Tmachan.html ). He is
associated with Freedom Communications of Irvine, CA; the School of Business
& Economics, Chapman University, in Orange, CA; and the Hoover Institution of
Stanford University,
-30-
from The Laissez Faire City Times, Vol 3, No 48, December 13,
-----
Aloha, He'Ping,
Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations,
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
Roads End

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