Free Trade, Why "Free" Matters

by: Dean Baker, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

Free Trade, Why "Free" Matters
(Artwork: Ben Shahn)

    Senator McCain was in Colombia last week touting his support for the trade agreement that the Bush administration had negotiated with the country. He also touted his support for NAFTA, contrasting both positions with Senator Obama's opposition to the two pacts.

    McCain had an important ally in his campaign. The media decided to embellish McCain's case by touting his support for "free trade," as opposed to the specific deals in question.
This is a very important difference and it reflects deeply held biases in the media.

    The most important point, which I unfortunately have to keep repeating, is that these are not free trade agreements. They do not free all trade and, in fact, increase some forms of protectionist barriers.

    The main area in which US trade policy has sought "free" trade has been manufactured goods. A main purpose of most recent trade deals has been to make it as easy as possible for US firms to relocate their production to Mexico, Central America, and everywhere else and to ship their output back to the United States.

    This does not mean just reducing tariff barriers. In most cases, the tariff barriers to imports were already low. The point of these deals was to set up an institutional framework that would facilitate foreign investment in manufacturing in these countries for the purpose of exporting back to the United States.

    This meant talking to the auto companies, the textile companies, and other businesses and finding out exactly what was preventing them from taking advantage of the low-cost labor in these developing countries and then removing the obstacles. This had the effect of putting manufacturing workers in the United States in direct competition with low-paid workers in the developing world.

    Putting US manufacturing workers in competition with low-paid foreign workers lowers their wages. It also has the effect of lowering the wages of non-college-educated workers more generally, since manufacturing has historically been a source of high-paying jobs for workers without college degrees.

    Of course, we have seen a decline in the relative wages and job security of non-college-educated workers. This is not a case of the trade agreements not working or not following the course predicted by economic theory. This is what the trade agreements were designed to do - the reduction in the relative wages and living standards of non-college-educated workers is exactly the outcome predicted by economic theory.

    But this is not "free trade." We decided to subject our non-college-educated workers to competition with low-paid workers in the developing world. If Senator McCain and others really supported free trade, they would be insisting that we do the exact same thing for our most highly educated professionals.

    In other words, we would ask our hospitals, law firms, universities, and other employers of highly educated workers, what exactly is keeping them from filling their staffs with low-paid professionals from the developing world? We would then change the laws and structure the institutions to ensure that smart kids from the developing world, who were trained to our standards, could as easily work as professionals in the United States as kids born in New York or California.

    This would send the wages of professionals tumbling, along with the price of their services. This is exactly the sort of gain from trade that economists like so much, except in this case it would come at the expense of the most highly paid workers instead of low- and moderate-income workers.

    We should also have a system that taxes back a portion of the earnings of these foreign-born professionals and sends the money to their home country. This should allow these countries to educate two or three professionals for every one that comes to the United States.

    If we adopted a trade policy that also subjected the most highly educated workers to foreign competition, then it could more accurately be called "free trade." (We still have to talk about patents and copyrights.) But the current trade policy is far from free trade, it is simply one-sided protectionism that is designed to redistribute income from less educated workers to more educated workers. Calling it "free trade" gives a policy designed to redistribute income upward a legitimacy it does not deserve.

    When politicians like John McCain call our trade policy "free trade," they are not being honest. Of course, no one expects politicians to be honest. But when the media call our trade policy "free trade," well they also are not being honest. We do have a right to expect more from the media.

Creative Commons License
This work by Truthout is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial 3.0 United States License.





     

»



Dean Baker is a macroeconomist and co-director of the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington, DC. He previously worked as a senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute and an assistant professor at Bucknell University. He is a regular Truthout columnist and a member of Truthout's Board of Advisers.


Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



The point of this article

The point of this article cannot possibly be over emphasized. We're sending our jobs overseas at the behest of the multinational corporations who have no loyalty to workers in the US, even though in many cases it was these workers who assisted in the success of the company. This trend is emulated by any and all who aspire to the level of "success" enjoyed by the big boys. Another example of how things start at the top of the heap and filter downward. The message, it seems to me, is that we must reign in corporate power, and it's ability to change US law for its benefit when this hurts us.


This is an excellent

This is an excellent portrait of the crux of the problem with the debate over free trade, and how the nomenclature influences the discussion.


Freakin' Brilliant!

Freakin' Brilliant!


One advantage of foreign

One advantage of foreign workers for employers is that they do not have to pay the tax or social security burden. the US government is using a tax system based on the pre-internet labor model.


The reality is the they

The reality is the they *are* working to export professional jobs in areas like IT, engineering, and business administraion. Companies are setting up R&D facilities in India and China and Eastern Europe where trained engineers cost $25/hour (not what they are paid which is half of that. There is nothing "free" about free trade or the free market. Fair trade is what we should be working towards and supporting but that is not what gets our economic elite wealthy.


Taxing money-grams and

Taxing money-grams and escrow services like Western Union who facilitate payments and transfers of money by illegal laborers would create a more equal burden on employers and reduce the attractiveness of foreign or illegal labor.


Once again Baker is being

Once again Baker is being disingenuous and giving Obama a free pass. Obama does not oppose NAFTA, as Baker claims. He makes some anti-NAFTA sound bites, because he needs the support of the left. Recently his adviser Austan Goolsbee reassured the Canadian government that Obama's rhetoric "should be viewed as more political positioning than a clear articulation of policy plans." Obama's no different from Clinton (Bill or Hillary) only he's better at fooling people into thinking he's progressive.


A couple of things really

A couple of things really bother me: why does the 'big' media forego rational analysis, and generalize a "free trade" sound-bite? Is it just easier than trying to explain the realities? Is that what they want to sell us- "easier"? (If they want to support John McCain, because "he's the guy they want to have a beer with", well, OK... just SAY THAT.) The other thing is, WHERE'S THE FREE TRADE? I want to buy a used Japanese car- from Japan- and they're available-CHEAP- with 1000cc (& smaller) engines, from a place with great roads, and a tax system that encourages people to "trade up" often. But I can't buy a car from them until it's 25 YEARS OLD!!! because the U.S. won't let me. (The Canadians insist that the car be 15 years old, or older... almost as bad.) This is about protecting auto mfrs- and the used car business. What's FREE about THAT? They make most of those cars (or did) out of cheap, excellent U.S. scrap metal... and I can have the car DISASSEMBLED and sold bit by bit- just not an intact car. Maybe McCain can go to Japan and free the hostage used cars... ^..^


Free trade is free to some

Free trade is free to some and totally obstructed to others. Big corporations gain huge profits and the average citizen sees less money but more products. The paradox is that at this rate eventually no one will be able to consume the production at the rate at which it is created and the overseas bubble will burst like all the other bubbles before that. If these huge multinationals were really thinking about what they were doing they would realize that absolute monopolistic control and the advent of cheap overseas labor results in the lack of funds to consume the production as I pointed out already but it also because less people are working encourages people to do for themselves more and actually slowly begins to remove them the materialism loop. For the most part many of us see free trade for what it is and we dislike how it is being put forward and forced upon the rest of the world's populace by a handful of elites. Of course all we have to do now is sit back and watch these same elites destroy themselves from within. By the time they have all amassed their monopolies and are standing on top of the mountain they will realize they can not come down and there is nothing below the peak of this mountain holding them up anymore. Absolute greed can only result in its complete and polar opposite and that is absolute poverty.


To me, "free trade" seems to

To me, "free trade" seems to mean it's free for everyone except the average USA citizen. Unfortunately, it's all part of a plan to turn the USA, Canada, and Mexico into the North American Union. But aside from having the USA overrun with illegals, I have my doubts that we will be able to migrate to Canada or Mexico to live and work. Right now the biggest import we have is poverty. You cannot bring in every uneducated illegal alien on the planet and have a nation stay healthy and wealthy. When tariffs and protectionism went out the window--so did our wealth.


Your comments don't go far

Your comments don't go far enough. It is not that agreements like NAFTA are not free trade agreements, they have nothing to do with free trade. They are protectionist lists contained in over a thousand pages (in just this one agreement) listing all sorts of shalls and shall nots. As Ross Perot said, a true free trade agreement can be written on a single sheet of paper. He likewise may not have been about free trade -- where the government keeps its nose out of its country's businesses -- but he did say I want the same deal his country gives him. Bill of Rights Enforcement = Freedom


Interesting. But please

Interesting. But please explain: What is it in the law that encourages investment abroad, or removes obstacles to moving production to other countries?


there is no free lunch-there

there is no free lunch-there is no free trade, but a continual exercise in getting someone else to pay for it...to the end of the spiral.


I usually admire Dean

I usually admire Dean Baker's analyses, but I have no problems (except for the carbon footprint) with "US firms relocating their production to Mexico or Central America and shipping their output back to the United States." After all, the US and European countries have been indulging in just this kind of economic colonialism for centuries, at the expense of the third world. Why this concern only now? It is not a policy position that any US politician will adopt any time soon, but US manufacturing workers SHOULD be put in direct competition with foreign workers... as long as we can ensure that the foreign workers are not being ill-treated or exploited and that the foreign environment is being protected as we would our own. Sure, those are often big if's, but THAT's where our concerns should be directed, not at protectionism. What is fair or just about a system that pays a North American or European laborer a hundred to a thousand times as much as his/her Asian, African or Latin American counterpart (even after accounting for cost of living)? I know people educated as lawyers and engineers in their home countries who are instead pumping gas here in the US (and not because of our "freedoms"). Why? What maintains these distorted wage structures? As for professionals, WAKE UP! US hospitals, universities and other employers of highly educated technical workers are ALREADY filling their staffs with professionals from the developing world. Been to a hospital lately? Where was your doctor from? Over half of the graduate students in the sciences and engineering at US universities are from India and China. It is not just call centers. Highly technical research is ALREADY being outsourced to India and China. Perhaps if we could keep them employed in their home countries, they wouldn't need to come here to pump gas or pick apples.


Free trade is the

Free trade is the imperialist scam of the United States. Fair trade with regulation is the only way trade can work ethically.


I think the idea was to

I think the idea was to lower your overhead (labour costs) and pass the savings along to the shareholders. But what eventually happens is that once you've laid off all of the people that are supposed to be buying your products, you have to start dropping prices ( so that the supervisor that was once making 50K a year and is now making 8.75 an hour at McDonald's)to the point where the margins no longer justify the means. Add to that the spiraling costs of gas and their margins shrink again. $250+ a barrel oil will fix NAFTA, if it doesn't break everything else first.


Dean Baker: " ... In

Dean Baker: " ... In other words, we would ask our hospitals, law firms, universities, and other employers of highly educated workers, what exactly is keeping them from filling their staffs with low-paid professionals from the developing world? We would then change the laws and structure the institutions to ensure that smart kids from the developing world, who were trained to our standards, could as easily work as professionals in the United States as kids born in New York or California. This would send the wages of professionals tumbling, along with the price of their services. ..." It has been my strong impression, derived from direct observation and experience, that this is precisely what has been done, so I don't understand the "would". I don't know about law, but in many fields such as medicine and computers, the influx of lower-paid yet highly talented, well-trained, younger, more submissive people from (mostly) southern and eastern Asia has been quite remarkable. I don't think the working class is defined by college education, or the lack of it, any more. If you have to work for a living, you're working-class. The overall thrust of the essay is quite correct, though, in stating that "free trade" is by no means free. It is carefully managed to serve the owning and ruling classes.