*I**n the current crisis like great depression, all those melted into air
will again solidify in antique freezers. Reverse effect. The trend has to be
watched. All the Asian praise for Obama chettan, the domestician,  will
vanish into thin air!! d.Prasad

*A worrying trend of economic nationalism is emerging in the downturn;
policymakers must insist on the merits of openness

About 2,000 workers at 17 sites across the country have been taking part in
unofficial strikes protesting at the use of foreign labour. The protests
started at an oil refinery in Lincolnshire. An Italian company that has been
subcontracted to work on the site is using its existing Italian and
Portuguese employees. Trade unions maintain that the jobs ought to have gone
to British workers. Such demands echo a worrying global trend to economic
nationalism.

The strikers' placards invoke a slogan coined by Gordon Brown in 2007:
"British jobs for British workers." Despite much criticism then and since,
Mr Brown insists that he has no regrets about using those words.

That response is either disingenuous or obtuse, and is in either case
discreditable. The UK is bound through membership of the European Union to
welcome workers from other EU states. But this country's treaty obligations
are the least of the objections to the Prime Minister's formulation and the
wildcat strikes. British workers who are unable to find jobs in a severe
downturn have understandable reason for frustration; but it is economically
illiterate to suppose that domestic living standards and employment are
damaged by the free movement of labour.

Economists refer to the "lump of labour fallacy". This is the notion that
there is a fixed amount of work to be done in the world, so that if jobs are
taken by foreign workers then domestic workers will lose out. A similar
grievously mistaken notion was advanced, and refuted, when women entered the
labour force in large numbers for the first time. Workers not only take
jobs, they also create jobs. When they spend their wages, they increase the
demand for consumer goods and services. Even large-scale immigration has
only a minuscule effect on unemployment and wage levels.

Mr Brown knows this. Yesterday he pointed once more to the dangers of
protectionism. Yet he has been careless about the connotations of his
"British workers" message. When this newspaper observed that the Prime
Minister's slogan was echoed in the propaganda of the British National
Party, Downing Street responded extraordinarily that, in fact, Mr Brown had
used the slogan first - as if this somehow softened rather than amply
confirmed its inflammatory content.

Unfortunately, the protests against foreign labour are part of a populist
impulse that often asserts itself in economic downturns. The issue is of
particular relevance in the US, where the fiscal stimulus package making its
way through Congress includes a "buy America" clause that would bar foreign
iron and steel producers from infrastructure projects. Erecting barriers to
imports and to labour is a tempting route, and a disastrous one. President
Obama has yet to retreat from the ferociously irresponsible protectionist
rhetoric deployed in his primary campaigns. It is scarcely conceivable that
his Treasury appointments are comfortable with this position, especially as
they know economic history well.

The Great Depression is the precedent that today's policymakers fear. Its
human costs were measured in unemployment, homelessness and hunger. It was
aggravated by protectionism. With the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act in the United
States, the adoption of tariffs and imperial preference by Britain and the
division of the global economy into currency blocs, world trade by the end
of 1932 was barely one third of the level of 1929. The World Bank now
forecasts that world trade will contract in 2009, for the first time since
1982. A renewed Doha Round of trade talks is needed.

In these circumstances, policymakers have an onerous responsibility but an
easy message to convey. Economic nationalism is morally objectionable; it is
also a fast track to penury.
*
*

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