Nice try, Harry, but what the Meyerson article (below) suggests is that the
US is creating the very conditions that create illegal immigration and make
third world people head for "lifeboat" USA.  Whether, as the article
states, US agribusinesses are "incomparably more efficient" than
agriculture in Mexico is questionable.  American farm prices are kept
"competitive" by very large subsidies: "The United States paid farmers
almost $15.7 billion in subsidies during 2002, and the U.S. Agriculture
Department projected $18.7 billion for 2003. Subsidies, which rise and fall
opposite market prices, peaked in 2000 at $32.3 billionThe United States
paid farmers almost $15.7 billion in subsidies during 2002, and the U.S.
Agriculture Department projects $18.7 billion for 2003. Subsidies, which
rise and fall opposite market prices, peaked in 2000 at $32.3 billion, the
USDA said." (http://www.washtimes.com/business/20031207-114046-8545r.htm)

No wonder that American farmers can undersell Mexican corn and pork
producers!
 
Ed

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
 
NAFTA and Nativism

   By Harold Meyerson   Washington Post   Wednesday, February 8, 2006

Globalized Into Oblivion

  As long as the global economy is designed to keep workers powerless,
Mexican desperation and American anger will only grow.

In  December the House approved a bill by Judiciary Committee Chairman
James   Sensenbrenner   of   Wisconsin   that  would  turn  all  those
undocumented   immigrants   into  felons.  It  would  supersede  local
ordinances  that  keep police from inquiring into the status of people
coming forth to report crimes or help in investigations. It would help
create  a  permanent underground population in our midst, with no hope of
ever attaining legal status.

But the most striking aspect of the assault on undocumented immigrants is
that it has no theory of causality. Over 40 percent of the Mexicans who
have  come, legally and illegally, to the United States have done so  in
the  past  15  years.  The  boom in undocumenteds is even more
concentrated than that: There were just 2.5 million such immigrants in the
United States in 1995; fully 8 million have arrived since then.

Why?  It's  not because we've let down our guard at the border; to the
contrary,  the border is more militarized now than it's ever been. The
answer is actually simpler than that. In large part, it's NAFTA.

The North American Free Trade Agreement was sold, of course, as a boon to
the citizens of the United States, Canada and Mexico -- guaranteed both to
raise incomes and lower prices, however improbably, throughout the
continent.  Bipartisan  elites  promised that it would stanch the flow
of  illegal  immigrants,  too.  "There  will  be  less  illegal
immigration  because  more  Mexicans  will  be  able  to support their
children  by  staying  home,"  said  President  Bill Clinton as he was
building support for the measure in the spring of 1993.

But  NAFTA,  which  took  effect  in  1994,  could  not have been more
precisely  crafted  to  increase immigration -- chiefly because of its
devastating  effect  on Mexican agriculture. As liberal economist Jeff
Faux  points  out  in  "The  Global  Class  War,"  his  just-published
indictment  of the actual workings of the new economy, Mexico had been
home  to  a poor agrarian sector for generations, which the government
helped  sustain  through  price  supports  on  corn  and beans. NAFTA,
though, put those farmers in direct competition with incomparably more
efficient  U.S.  agribusinesses. It proved to be no contest: From 1993
through 2002, at least 2 million Mexican farmers were driven off their
land.

The experience of Mexican industrial workers under NAFTA hasn't been a
whole  lot  better. With the passage of NAFTA, the maquiladoras on the
border  boomed.  But  the  raison  d'etre  for  these factories was to
produce  exports  at  the  lowest wages possible, and with the Mexican
government  determined  to keep its workers from unionizing, the NAFTA
boom  for Mexican workers never materialized. In the pre-NAFTA days of
1975,  Faux documents, Mexican wages came to 23 percent of U.S. wages; in
1993-94,  just  before  NAFTA, they amounted to 15 percent; and by 2002
they had sunk to a mere 12 percent.

The  official  Mexican  poverty rate rose from 45.6 percent in 1994 to
50.3 percent in 2000. And that was before competition from China began to
shutter the maquiladoras and reduce Mexican wages even more.

So  if  Sensenbrenner  wants  to  identify a responsible party for the
immigration he so deplores, he might take a peek in the mirror. In the
winter  of  '93, he voted for NAFTA. He helped establish a system that
increased   investment   opportunities   for  major  corporations  and
diminished  the rights, power and, in many instances, living standards of
workers  on  both  sides  of the border. Now he and his Republican
colleagues  are  stirring the resentments of the same American workers
they placed in jeopardy by supporting the corporate trade agenda.

Walls  on  the border won't fix this problem, nor will forcing cops to
arrest  entire  barrios. So long as the global economy is designed, as
NAFTA was, to keep workers powerless, Mexican desperation and American
anger will only grow. Forget the fence. We need a new rulebook for the
world.


>Chris,
>
>As usual a lot of nonsense promoted by people who have lost some
>of their monopoly advantages because of increased trade. The
>privileged never like the free market because it provides the
>best deal for the consumer - who is everyone.
>
>Some $431 million worth of US pork went to hungry Mexicans in
>2004. That's 3.5 times the pre-NAFTA amount. During the same time
>7 times as much pork went to Canada.
>
>Poultry exports to Mexico rose 61.5% during the same period.
>
>Sales of U.S. corn to Mexico increased 175 percent (and fifteen
>times as much to Canada).
>
>Mexico chose to corn imports under NAFTA in order to provide
>lower cost food to its increasingly urban population and to
>ensure sufficient animal feed.
>
>Seems reasonable.
>
>Fresh fruits and vegetables exports to Mexico doubled while the
>increase to Canada was 46% - to $1.9 billion!   
>
>The idiot who wrote this piece apparently has a thing for
>dirt-poor farmers living near starvation and surviving only
>because the government subsidizes them.
>
>But, remember, these anti-NAFTA pieces stem from people who were
>more privileged before NAFTA - but must now give a better deal to
>American consumers because of competition.
>
>So, do I approve of NAFTA?
>
>Of course not. It's a customs union. I want free trade. The US
>should simply drop its close to 9,000 tariffs, its multiplicity
>of quotas and anti-dumping laws. Of course it won't because the
>money bags that benefit from these restrictions pay well to stop
>the market process.
>
>But you know that.
>
>Harry
>
>**********************************
>Henry George School of Social Science
>of Los Angeles
>Box 655  Tujunga  CA 91042
>818 352-4141
>**********************************
> 
> 

Sent using cyberus.ca WebMail - http://www.cyberus.ca/
_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[email protected]
http://fes.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to