Has anyone read Lou Dobb's book, Attack on the Middle Class, (IIRC)?
I second your thought, Arthur, about the importance of social cohesion. This is what I see most threatened now in the US. The country is being looted on many different levels: economic, financial, social, educational, spiritual, cultural.... Cheers, Lawry _____ From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Cordell, Arthur: ECOM Sent: Friday, December 08, 2006 12:16 PM To: Keith Hudson; [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [email protected] Subject: Re: [Futurework] [SPAM] Re: Democrats and "Free" Trade Keith, You do what you can. What you don't do is open the borders to goods made abroad where workers' wages are a small fraction of wages at home; where environmental laws are nil or negligible; where child labour is the rule rather than the exception. The free traders are always in some sort of rush. What's the rush. We hear in Canada the constant drum beat "macht schnell", hurry up or we are going to be left behind as a third world country. It could be that by throwing open the borders, third world status will be with us sooner rather than later. Sure education/knowledge/innovation, etc., is important. Also important is social cohesion, a sense of predictability and the existence of a middle class. Rushing globalizaiton benefits the elites in society and raises wages in certain low wage countries. If globalization is so important, then we should move slowly and cautiously. Right now it seems to be a veiled attack on the trade unions in industrialized countries and the by-product is the continuing immizeration of the middle class. This can only lead to a bad outcome. arthur _____ From: Keith Hudson [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Fri 12/8/2006 2:25 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [email protected]; Cordell, Arthur: ECOM Subject: Re: [SPAM] Re: [Futurework] Democrats and "Free" Trade I was not writing of "economists' time" but of the time it takes to offer full educational opportunities to the children of any unfortunate workers who are displaced by more efficient industries or services elsewhere in order for the children to have a better chance of avoiding the same state as their parents. And it is to be remembered that more workers are displaced by efficiency in competitive industries and services at home rather than abroad. So what do you do about that? If you try to protect this situation you are in danger of doing what the USSR did for 70 years -- which has now bequeathed Russia with an increasingly impoverished, demoralised and steeply declining population with galloping Aids, hard drug addiction, TB and alcoholism. KH At 22:41 07/12/2006 -0800, you wrote: One among many problems with the neo-liberal "open markets raises all boats" theory is that while jobs are lost in real time, standards of living are increased in "economists'" time which could be short term but is usually medium or long term (or never term given that there are always exogenous factors that intervene that don't quite fit into the economists' supply curves... And of course as Keynes most famously said "in the long run... MG > Arthur, > > If the Democrats in America can't decide on free trade or otherwise, then > tough luck on them, because customers will decide for them sooner or later > by buying cheaper goods made abroad and avoiding costlier home-made goods. > > If it's sooner, then the out-of-work factory (and some service) workers > will concentrate government's mind on reforming the education of its > children. If it's later, then the factories (and some other services) will > be forever inefficient compared with those in other countries and the > general standard of living will go down. And then the factory (etc) > workers > will be out of work a litte later anyway. The general standard of living > could remain down forever from then onwards when one considers the rate of > technological change and the new skills required.) > > If a country wants to engage then its government should ensure the best > possible education for its children, outlaw protective practices in all > trades and professions (and publicise all past formal credentialising > examinations). In this way, everybody will have as interesting jobs as > they > are capable of and shorter working weeks and more leisure time will > gradually become the norm. > > Keith Hudson > > At 20:40 07/12/2006 -0500, you wrote: > >>Content-class: urn:content-classes:message >>Content-Type: multipart/alternative; >>boundary="----_=_NextPart_001_01C71A6A.19761E86"; >> x-avg-checked=avg-ok-4B151299 >> >>dir=ltr> >> >> >> >>---------- >>From: Strategic Forecasting, Inc. [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] >>Sent: Thu 12/7/2006 7:28 PM >>To: Subject: Stratfor Public Policy Intelligence Report >> >>468e12.jpg Version: 7.1.409 / Virus Database: 268.15.14/578 - Release Date: 07/12/2006 snip, snip...................... Keith Hudson, Bath, England, <www.evolutionary-economics.org <http://www.evolutionary-economics.org/> >
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