Jared Bernstein: we don't need so-called "free trade agreements" to expand
trade. Look how we're expanding trade with Cuba.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/posteverything/wp/2016/03/23/the-new-trade-paradigm-pro-globalization-anti-free-trade-agreement/
The new trade paradigm: Pro-globalization, anti-‘free’ trade agreement

By Jared Bernstein <http://www.washingtonpost.com/people/jared-bernstein> March
23 at 6:00 AM

*Jared Bernstein, a former chief economist to Vice President Biden, is a
senior fellow at the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities and author of
the new book 'The Reconnection Agenda: Reuniting Growth and Prosperity.'*

The time has come to create a new category of person in this town: Someone
who supports expanded trade and is all for globalization with a voice for
working people here and abroad, but who has completely soured on so-called
free-trade agreements (FTAs), as they too often squelch that voice.

The need for this new type of person comes from two sources. First, after
years of studying, critiquing, trying to improve and even helping to
promote FTAs (when I worked for the Obama administration, I helped with the
South Korean FTA), I’ve come to view the process as impossibly broken and
essentially corrupted. It’s opaque, the end product is incomprehensible to
most people, the input (and thus much of the output) is imbalanced
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2014/02/28/how-companies-wield-off-the-record-influence-on-obamas-trade-policy/>,
the politics are a hot mess, some of what’s called “free trade” is actually
protectionist
<http://www.huffingtonpost.com/dean-baker/the-year-of-the-angry-eco_b_9464410.html>,
and while many elites remain committed to evermore FTAs, there’s little
trust among the people.

Second, if you suggest any of the above, you’re quickly labeled as a
knuckle-dragging protectionist, not fit for elite company.

But can such a creature as I’m proposing exist? If we want globalization
and expanded trade to proceed apace, don’t we need FTAs?

No, and I’ll give you examples in a moment. But whether you like it or not,
and I’m a big fan, the globalization toothpaste ain’t going back in the
tube. In fact, given the depth of congressional gridlock, we’re a lot more
likely to expand trade without FTAs than with them.

The most recent example of expanded trade without FTAs is front page news
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/obamas-visit-comes-as-american-businesses-are-rushing-back-to-cuba/2016/03/21/980efe40-c8a6-4d59-ae7c-32b58f4b9b94_story.html?hpid=hp_rhp-more-top-stories_no-name%3Ahomepage%2Fstory>:
Cuba. As President Obama admirably works to update our outdated diplomatic
relations with Cuba, U.S. companies are figuring out ways to gain a
presence there. I don’t foresee a Starbucks on every other corner of Havana
anytime soon — the Cuban government will carefully control the economic
opening to tap the much-needed benefits to their economy of expanding trade
with a first-world country — but what we’re seeing unfold there is a
microcosm of the type of nuanced trading arrangement that could never be
negotiated with Congress. If it were up to many in that body, Obama
wouldn’t even have gone there this week, and there would have been no way
for any of our companies to follow him.

Instead, a U.S. company will build small, low-cost tractors there
<http://www.reuters.com/article/us-cuba-usa-tractors-idUSKCN0VO28R>, U.S.
hotel managers will manage an historic Havana hotel (one whose ownership
will remain with the Cuban government, as foreigners cannot own property in
Cuba), Cisco Systems is to “partner with a Cuban university to develop an
Internet technology academy and … General Electric is working on an
aviation and energy deal.”

That’s all without an FTA anywhere in sight, not to mention an antiquated
embargo still in place.  The extent of government control may well limit
the benefits of trade to many Cubans, at least initially, and I am not
suggesting that more trade alone is the solution to the oppressive aspects
of their regime, but this is progress.

On a much larger scale, there’s China, with whom we’ve never had an FTA. In
terms of total trade in goods, China was our largest trading partner last
year. Of course, we’ve long bought a lot more from them than they’ve bought
from us. We ran a goods trade deficit with China to the tune of $366
billion in 2015, about 2 percent of our gross domestic product, which is
about where it has been since 2010.

With trade flows and deficits of those magnitudes, we must manage our trade
with China. In the past, that’s meant trying, often fruitlessly, to prevent
them from holding down the value of their currency, a tactic that provides
their exporters with a significant price advantage over ours. Their
currency looks reasonably aligned right now, but the value of currencies of
some other countries (e.g., Singapore, Taiwan, and Korea) are substantially
misaligned to the low side <http://www.piie.com/publications/pb/pb15-20.pdf>
.

Surely, tackling this portentous currency problem with large Asian
exporters would require FTAs, right?

To the contrary, our trade negotiators explicitly tell us that they cannot
get enforceable currency rules into an FTA, with the Trans-Pacific
Partnership (TPP) as the most recent example. The other countries with whom
we’re negotiating simply won’t allow it, which should give you a sense of
its importance.

The answer must instead be for the United States to take action outside of
FTAs, creating rules to impose countervailing duties, for example, on
exporters who manage their currencies to gain an unfair trade advantage
(the International Monetary Fund has established ways to identify
<https://www.imf.org/external/np/pp/eng/2006/062806.pdf> currency
manipulation).

What about the other stuff we do in trade agreements? Well, some of what’s
in there, like protecting patents that artificially boost drug prices,
we’re better off without (our poorer trading partners are particularly
better off without such protectionist measures). Some other initiatives
sound good but lack teeth. The TPP, to its credit, says signatory countries
must have minimum wages, but it says nothing that would prevent a country
from setting its wage floor at the equivalent of one cent.

How about dispute settlements? That’s been a big selling point for FTAs, as
investors hesitate to do business with a country like Vietnam absent the
confidence that the rule of law will protect their investments. It’s a fair
point, but it must be weighed against the notion of multinational companies
suing governments through a tribunal that supersedes sovereign law in a
system that allows no appeals. TPP cheerleaders point out that the United
States has never lost one of these cases, so why worry? But we should worry
about the ability of emerging countries to enact product, environmental and
labor protections that multinationals might not like (read this useful
discussion
<https://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/monkey-cage/wp/2015/03/26/people-are-freaking-out-about-the-trans-pacific-partnerships-investor-dispute-settlement-system-why-should-you-care/>
of such concerns).

Moreover, from the perspective of creating this new creature that supports
trade but not trade agreements, the key question is do dispute settlement
rules in particular, and FTAs in general, actually boost trade and trade
flows? The answer is far from obvious, and my read of the evidence is that
trade will continue to expand with or without FTAs. Do not conflate trade
with trade agreements.

The determinants of trade flows are many and varied. They include exchange
rates, relative incomes and growth rates, political regimes (as in Cuba),
tariffs and non-tariff barriers, like currency manipulation or arbitrary
rules applied to imports. In a perfect world, perhaps we could negotiate
these issues in ways that took account of the needs of all stakeholders
here and abroad, far beyond those of the investor class. But in the real
world, that hasn’t happened.

That’s not a roadblock; it’s a new opportunity. We must continue to try to
open markets, as may be occurring in Cuba, and to pressure existing
institutions, including the World Trade Organization and the International
Monetary Fund, to facilitate expanded trade without disempowering working
people. Here in the United States, we must
<http://www.nytimes.com/2016/03/14/opinion/the-era-of-free-trade-might-be-over-thats-a-good-thing.html?action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=opinion-c-col-right-region&region=opinion-c-col-right-region&WT.nav=opinion-c-col-right-region&_r=0>
simultaneously pursue more balanced trade while helping to build the high
value added supply chains that could help revitalize our manufacturers.

Would politicians oppose this idea of more trade without trade agreements?
I doubt it, at least not the ones who aren’t simply doing the bidding of
the multinationals. As one high-ranking, pro-worker politician from a state
with a lot of exports told me, “I’d love to never again have to vote for an
FTA.”

The TPP could still squeak through, though I doubt it. But longer term, I
suspect this politician will get his wish. The era of FTAs is likely behind
us for now. I know for a fact that there are many who feel as I do —
supportive of trade but deeply dissatisfied with FTAs. Join us in injecting
a new, progressive option into an old, stale D.C. debate.
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