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Anti Federalist
07-18-2009, 10:09 AM
Doomed by the Myths of Free Trade

How the Economy was Lost
By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

The American economy has gone away. It is not coming back until free trade myths are buried six feet under.

America’s 20th century economic success was based on two things. Free trade was not one of them. America’s economic success was based on protectionism, which was ensured by the union victory in the Civil War, and on British indebtedness, which destroyed the British pound as world reserve currency. Following World War II, the US dollar took the role as reserve currency, a privilege that allows the US to pay its international bills in its own currency.

World War II and socialism together ensured that the US economy dominated the world at the mid 20th century. The economies of the rest of the world had been destroyed by war or were stifled by socialism

The ascendant position of the US economy caused the US government to be relaxed about giving away American industries, such as textiles, as bribes to other countries for cooperating with America’s cold war and foreign policies. For example, Turkey’s US textile quotas were increased in exchange for over-flight rights in the Gulf War, making lost US textile jobs an off-budget war expense.

In contrast, countries such as Japan and Germany used industrial policy to plot their comebacks. By the late 1970s, Japanese auto makers had the once dominant American auto industry on the ropes. The first economic act of the “free market” Reagan administration in 1981 was to put quotas on the import of Japanese cars in order to protect Detroit and the United Auto Workers.

Eamonn Fingleton, Pat Choate, and others have described how negligence in Washington DC aided and abetted the erosion of America’s economic position. What we didn’t give away, the United States let be taken away while preaching a “free trade” doctrine at which the rest of the world scoffed.

Fortunately, the U.S.’s adversaries at the time, the Soviet Union and China, had unworkable economic systems that posed no threat to America’s diminishing economic prowess.

This furlough from reality ended when Soviet, Chinese, and Indian socialism surrendered around 1990, to be followed shortly thereafter by the rise of the high speed Internet. Suddenly, American and other first world corporations discovered that a massive supply of foreign labor was available at practically free wages.

To get Wall Street analysts and shareholder advocacy groups off their backs, and to boost shareholder returns and management bonuses, American corporations began moving their production for American markets offshore. Products that were made in Peoria are now made in China.

As offshoring spread, American cities and states lost tax base, and families and communities lost jobs. The replacement jobs, such as selling the offshored products at Wal-Mart, brought home less pay.

“Free market economists” covered up the damage done to the US economy by preaching a New Economy based on services and innovation. But it wasn’t long before corporations discovered that the high speed Internet let them offshore a wide range of professional service jobs. In America, the hardest hit have been software engineers and information technology (IT) workers.

The American corporations quickly learned that by declaring “shortages” of skilled Americans, they could get from Congress H-1b work visas for lower paid foreigners with whom to replace their American work force. Many US corporations are known for forcing their US employees to train their foreign replacements in exchange for severance pay.

Chasing after shareholder return and “performance bonuses,” US corporations deserted their American workforce. The consequences can be seen everywhere. The loss of tax base has threatened the municipal bonds of cities and states and reduced the wealth of individuals who purchased the bonds. The lost jobs with good pay resulted in the expansion of consumer debt in order to maintain consumption. As the offshored goods and services are brought back to America to sell, the US trade deficit has exploded to unimaginable heights, calling into question the US dollar as reserve currency and America’s ability to finance its trade deficit.

As the American economy eroded away bit by bit, “free market” ideologues produced endless reassurances that America had pulled a fast one on China, sending China dirty and grimy manufacturing jobs. Free of these “old economy” jobs, Americans were lulled with promises of riches. In place of dirty fingernails, American efforts would flow into innovation and entrepreneurship. In the meantime, the “service economy” of software and communications would provide a leg up for the work force.

Education was the answer to all challenges. This appeased the academics, and they produced no studies that would contradict the propaganda and, thus, curtail the flow of federal government and corporate grants.

The “free market” economists, who provided the propaganda and disinformation to hide the act of destroying the US economy, were well paid. And as Business Week noted, “outsourcing’s inner circle has deep roots in GE (General Electric) and McKinsey,” a consulting firm. Indeed, one of McKinsey’s main apologists for offshoring of US jobs, Diana Farrell, is now a member of Obama’s White House National Economic Council.

The pressure of jobs offshoring, together with vast imports, has destroyed the economic prospects for all Americans, except the CEOs who receive “performance” bonuses for moving American jobs offshore or giving them to H-1b work visa holders. Lowly paid offshored employees, together with H-1b visas, have curtailed employment for older and more experienced American workers. Older workers traditionally receive higher pay. However, when the determining factor is minimizing labor costs for the sake of shareholder returns and management bonuses, older workers are unaffordable. Doing a good job, providing a good service, is no longer the corporation’s function. Instead, the goal is to minimize labor costs at all cost.

Thus, “free trade” has also destroyed the employment prospects of older workers. Forced out of their careers, they seek employment as shelf stockers for Wal-Mart.

I have read endless tributes to Wal-Mart from “libertarian economists,” who sing Wal-Mart’s praises for bringing low price goods, 70 per cent of which are made in China, to the American consumer. What these “economists” do not factor into their analysis is the diminution of American family incomes and government tax base from the loss of the goods producing jobs to China. Ladders of upward mobility are being dismantled by offshoring, while California issues IOUs to pay its bills. The shift of production offshore reduces US GDP. When the goods and services are brought back to America to be sold, they increase the trade deficit. As the trade deficit is financed by foreigners acquiring ownership of US assets, this means that profits, dividends, capital gains, interest, rents, and tolls leave American pockets for foreign ones.

The demise of America’s productive economy left the US economy dependent on finance, in which the US remained dominant because the dollar is the reserve currency. With the departure of factories, finance went in new directions. Mortgages, which were once held in the portfolios of the issuer, were securitized. Individual mortgage debts were combined into a “security.” The next step was to strip out the interest payments to the mortgages and sell them as derivatives, thus creating a third debt instrument based on the original mortgages.

In pursuit of ever more profits, financial institutions began betting on the success and failure of various debt instruments and by implication on firms. They bought and sold collateral debt swaps. A buyer pays a premium to a seller for a swap to guarantee an asset’s value. If an asset “insured” by a swap falls in value, the seller of the swap is supposed to make the owner of the swap whole. The purchaser of a swap is not required to own the asset in order to contract for a guarantee of its value. Therefore, as many people could purchase as many swaps as they wished on the same asset. Thus, the total value of the swaps greatly exceeds the value of the assets.*

The next step is for holders of the swaps to short the asset in order to drive down its value and collect the guarantee. As the issuers of swaps were not required to reserve against them, and as there is no limit to the number of swaps, the payouts could easily exceed the net worth of the issuer.

This was the most shameful and most mindless form of speculation. Gamblers were betting hands that they could not cover. The US regulators fled their posts. The American financial institutions abandoned all integrity. As a consequence, American financial institutions and rating agencies are trusted nowhere on earth.

The US government should never have used billions of taxpayers’ dollars to pay off swap bets as it did when it bailed out the insurance company AIG. This was a stunning waste of a vast sum of money. The federal government should declare all swap agreements to be fraudulent contracts, except for a single swap held by the owner of the asset. Simply wiping out these fraudulent contracts would remove the bulk of the vast overhang of “troubled” assets that threaten financial markets.

The billions of taxpayers’ dollars spent buying up subprime derivatives were also wasted. The government did not need to spend one dime. All government needed to do was to suspend the mark-to-market rule. This simple act would have removed the solvency threat to financial institutions by allowing them to keep the derivatives at book value until financial institutions could ascertain their true values and write them down over time.

Taxpayers, equity owners, and the credit standing of the US government are being ruined by financial shysters who are manipulating to their own advantage the government’s commitment to mark-to-market and to the “sanctity of contracts.” Multi-trillion dollar “bailouts” and bank nationalization are the result of the government’s inability to respond intelligently.

Two more simple acts would have completed the rescue without costing the taxpayers one dollar: an announcement from the Federal Reserve that it will be lender of last resort to all depository institutions including money market funds, and an announcement reinstating the uptick rule.

The uptick rule was suspended or repealed a couple of years ago in order to permit hedge funds and shyster speculators to rip-off American equity owners. The rule prevented short-selling any stock that did not move up in price during the previous day. In other words, speculators could not make money at others’ expense by ganging up on a stock and short-selling it day after day.

As a former Treasury official, I am amazed that the US government, in the midst of the worst financial crises ever, is content for short-selling to drive down the asset prices that the government is trying to support. No bailout or stimulus plan has any hope until the uptick rule is reinstated.

The bald fact is that the combination of ignorance, negligence, and ideology that permitted the crisis to happen still prevails and is blocking any remedy. Either the people in power in Washington and the financial community are total dimwits or they are manipulating an opportunity to redistribute wealth from taxpayers, equity owners and pension funds to the financial sector.

The Bush and Obama plans total 1.6 trillion dollars, every one of which will have to be borrowed, and no one knows from where. This huge sum will compromise the value of the US dollar, its role as reserve currency, the ability of the US government to service its debt, and the price level. These staggering costs are pointless and are to no avail, as not one step has been taken that would alleviate the crisis.

If we add to my simple menu of remedies a ban, punishable by instant death, for short selling any national currency, the world can be rescued from the current crisis without years of suffering, violent upheavals and, perhaps, wars.

According to its hopeful but economically ignorant proponents, globalism was supposed to balance risks across national economies and to offset downturns in one part of the world with upturns in other parts. A global portfolio was a protection against loss, claimed globalism’s purveyors. In fact, globalism has concentrated the risks, resulting in Wall Street’s greed endangering all the economies of the world. The greed of Wall Street and the negligence of the US government have wrecked the prospects of many nations. Street riots are already occurring in parts of the world. On Sunday February 22, the right-wing TV station, Fox “News,” presented a program that predicted riots and disarray in the United States by 2014.

How long will Americans permit “their” government to rip them off for the sake of the financial interests that caused the problem? Obama’s cabinet and National Economic Council are filled with representatives of the interest groups that caused the problem. The Obama administration is not a government capable of preventing a catastrophe.

If truth be known, the “banking problem” is the least of our worries. Our economy faces two much more serious problems. One is that offshoring and H-1b visas have stopped the growth of family incomes, except, of course, for the super rich. To keep the economy going, consumers have gone deeper into debt, maxing out their credit cards and refinancing their homes and spending the equity. Consumers are now so indebted that they cannot increase their spending by taking on more debt. Thus, whether or not the banks resume lending is beside the point.
The other serious problem is the status of the US dollar as reserve currency. This status has allowed the US, now a country heavily dependent on imports just like a third world or lesser-developed country, to pay its international bills in its own currency. We are able to import $800 billion annually more than we produce, because the foreign countries from whom we import are willing to accept paper for their goods and services.

If the dollar loses its reserve currency role, foreigners will not accept dollars in exchange for real things. This event would be immensely disruptive to an economy dependent on imports for its energy, its clothes, its shoes, its manufactured products, and its advanced technology products.

If incompetence in Washington, the type of incompetence that produced the current economic crisis, destroys the dollar as reserve currency, the “unipower” will overnight become a third world country, unable to pay for its imports or to sustain its standard of living.

How long can the US government protect the dollar’s value by leasing its gold to bullion dealers who sell it, thereby holding down the gold price? Given the incompetence in Washington and on Wall Street, our best hope is that the rest of the world is even less competent and even in deeper trouble. In this event, the US dollar might survive as the least valueless of the world’s fiat currencies.

[I]Paul Craig Roberts was Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions.He can be reached at: PaulCraigRoberts@yahoo.com

erowe1
07-18-2009, 10:25 AM
Of course if Roberts doesn't want to pay less to buy things made in China, he doesn't have to. He is free to buy what he wants at as high of a price as he wants to pay. But where he gets the idea that government is his tool to manipulate my spending habits as some kind of central planner of the American economy to decide how many of what kind of jobs people have here I don't know. And if he is concerned about the shifts that have taken place in the kinds of jobs that abound in America, then he could take an approach that seeks to decrease rather than increase the role of politicians in that by looking for what things the elites in the halls of Congress have done that have contributed to these things and seeking to repeal those actions, thus decreasing the politicians' power over us, rather than add new government-based actions on top of them, thus increasing their power. For example, clearly one reason companies choose to use factories in other countries rather than here is because it's cheaper, and sometimes it's so much cheaper that even at their lower productivity it's cheaper per unit of the same good. Why is it cheaper? Largely because of differing government actions. Those foreign factories have to abide by lower standards of regulations. They don't have OSHA. They can use child labor. They don't have to pay anything close to our minimum wage. And they may not have to pay as much in taxes. So then, because of the immoral regulations and taxes that our politicians have implemented over here, they have effectively driven those manufacturing jobs away. If we want them back, then the way to get them is by getting rid of all those regulations and taxes so that those companies can open sweatshops here like the ones they can open elsewhere and pay people as little as those people are willing to sell their labor for, rather than have the politicians set an artificial price floor for it.

sratiug
07-18-2009, 10:39 AM
Of course if Roberts doesn't want to pay less to buy things made in China, he doesn't have to. He is free to buy what he wants at as high of a price as he wants to pay. But where he gets the idea that government is his tool to manipulate my spending habits as some kind of central planner of the American economy to decide how many of what kind of jobs people have here I don't know. And if he is concerned about the shifts that have taken place in the kinds of jobs that abound in America, then he could take an approach that seeks to decrease rather than increase the role of politicians in that by looking for what things the elites in the halls of Congress have done that have contributed to these things and seeking to repeal those actions, thus decreasing the politicians' power over us, rather than add new government-based actions on top of them, thus increasing their power. For example, clearly one reason companies choose to use factories in other countries rather than here is because it's cheaper, and sometimes it's so much cheaper that even at their lower productivity it's cheaper per unit of the same good. Why is it cheaper? Largely because of differing government actions. Those foreign factories have to abide by lower standards of regulations. They don't have OSHA. They can use child labor. They don't have to pay anything close to our minimum wage. And they may not have to pay as much in taxes. So then, because of the immoral regulations and taxes that our politicians have implemented over here, they have effectively driven those manufacturing jobs away. If we want them back, then the way to get them is by getting rid of all those regulations and taxes so that those companies can open sweatshops here like the ones they can open elsewhere and pay people as little as those people are willing to sell their labor for, rather than have the politicians set an artificial price floor for it.

After we replace internal federal taxes with a tariff, you can buy expensive foreign goods instead of cheap American ones if you want to.

erowe1
07-18-2009, 10:43 AM
After we replace internal federal taxes with a tariff, you can buy expensive foreign goods instead of cheap American ones if you want to.

Sure. I don't mind that idea if you just want to compare a tariff with an income tax. But saying something is better than the income tax isn't saying much. It's like choosing to drink a bucket of monkey snot rather than sliding down a razor blade into a pool of iodine. And I hope nobody thinks that a tariff is actually a positive good on its own, rather than merely less bad than an income tax. I also hope nobody here denies that eliminating the income tax and replacing it with nothing but just cutting federal spending commensurately should be our goal, rather than getting rid of it and replacing it with even more tariffs.

Anti Federalist
07-18-2009, 10:54 AM
Of course if Roberts doesn't want to pay less to buy things made in China, he doesn't have to.

I would like to, I'd be willing to pay a premium, but in many, many cases I cannot.

Please direct me to a US TV maker...


But where he gets the idea that government is his tool to manipulate my spending habits as some kind of central planner of the American economy to decide how many of what kind of jobs people have here I don't know

Article 1, section 8 US constitution.


And if he is concerned about the shifts that have taken place in the kinds of jobs that abound in America, then he could take an approach that seeks to decrease rather than increase the role of politicians in that by looking for what things the elites in the halls of Congress have done that have contributed to these things and seeking to repeal those actions thus decreasing the politicians' power over us, rather than add new government-based actions on top of them, thus increasing their power.

I don't about PCR but I know I am doing just that.

I have no desire for another layer of government intervention, I am looking to strip away most, if not all intervention and replace it with what was in place before, legal, simple, constitutional and certainly not a hindrance to growth and innovation.


For example, clearly one reason companies choose to use factories in other countries rather than here is because it's cheaper, and sometimes it's so much cheaper that even at their lower productivity it's cheaper per unit of the same good. Why is it cheaper? Largely because of differing government actions. Those foreign factories have to abide by lower standards of regulations. They don't have OSHA. They can use child labor. They don't have to pay anything close to our minimum wage.

Clearly this becomes a moral question, which needs to be addressed.

Is that valid?

Is there any point where something becomes so morally objectionable that it trumps making money?


And they may not have to pay as much in taxes. So then, because of the immoral regulations and taxes that our politicians have implemented over here, they have effectively driven those manufacturing jobs away. If we want them back, then the way to get them is by getting rid of all those regulations and taxes so that those companies can open sweatshops here like the ones they can open elsewhere and pay people as little as those people are willing to sell their labor for, rather than have the politicians set an artificial price floor for it.

Then you should support tariffs.

It was under a regime of tariffs that sweatshops existed in the US.

sratiug
07-18-2009, 11:09 AM
Sure. I don't mind that idea if you just want to compare a tariff with an income tax. But saying something is better than the income tax isn't saying much. It's like choosing to drink a bucket of monkey snot rather than sliding down a razor blade into a pool of iodine. And I hope nobody thinks that a tariff is actually a positive good on its own, rather than merely less bad than an income tax. I also hope nobody here denies that eliminating the income tax and replacing it with nothing but just cutting federal spending commensurately should be our goal, rather than getting rid of it and replacing it with even more tariffs.

A flat tariff is much better than an income tax, so I support it to replace internal taxes. With a tariff you don't have to file income tax so it keeps government tax collectors out of your life and on the borders where they should be. It also ends the subsidizing of imports by your tax dollars which is destroying our economy.

An amendment to replace internal taxes with a flat tariff could actually be passed when Americans see their choice. I don't think an amendment to abolish all government spending could pass.

erowe1
07-18-2009, 11:31 AM
A flat tariff is much better than an income tax, so I support it to replace internal taxes. With a tariff you don't have to file income tax so it keeps government tax collectors out of your life and on the borders where they should be. It also ends the subsidizing of imports by your tax dollars which is destroying our economy.

An amendment to replace internal taxes with a flat tariff could actually be passed when Americans see their choice. I don't think an amendment to abolish all government spending could pass.

We just need to cut both taxes and spending. And to get rid of the income tax and replace it with nothing, we wouldn't have to eliminate all federal spending, just about 35% of it. That might be hard to do politically, as would replacing the entire income tax with a flat tariff. But it wouldn't require and amendment in any case.

Also, kudos for specifying a flat tariff. I am much more agreeable to it the less potential there is to fiddle with things industry by industry and pick winners and losers with any kind of Congressional central management of the economy.

Brian4Liberty
07-18-2009, 01:05 PM
Good article by Roberts. Hits it on the head.

I wouldn't call "protectionism" a solution, but it's a tragedy (and interesting) that we can accept a nanny government that intrudes into every area of our lives, except when it comes to global "free trade"...

erowe1
07-18-2009, 01:07 PM
I wouldn't call "protectionism" a solution, but it's a tragedy (and interesting) that we can accept a nanny government that intrudes into every area of our lives, except when it comes to global "free trade"...

Amen to that. We need to stand up against government meddling in trade just as much as we need to stand up to its meddling in everything else.

BuddyRey
07-18-2009, 01:11 PM
"Free Trade" as we know it today isn't free trade at all. Roberts should consider the fact that the chief alternative to free trade (which is really just voluntary trade) would be a trade system governed by force and coercion. To hold down trade to only domestic transactions and perhaps "trusted" or "friendly" countries would require even more government in our lives. That doesn't sound very conservative (let alone libertarian) to me.

Brian4Liberty
07-18-2009, 01:20 PM
"Free Trade" as we know it today isn't free trade at all. Roberts should consider the fact that the chief alternative to free trade (which is really just voluntary trade) would be a trade system governed by force and coercion. To hold down trade to only domestic transactions and perhaps "trusted" or "friendly" countries would require even more government in our lives. That doesn't sound very conservative (let alone libertarian) to me.

Like many other words and phrases, "Free Trade" has a general meaning to the public, and a variety of more specific meanings to other people (like the word anarchy). The general public looks at "free trade" as nothing more than the existence of international trade. Nothing more specific than that. In that sense, we have free trade today, and many people either defend or attack "free trade" on that basis.

ClayTrainor
07-18-2009, 01:27 PM
Like many other words and phrases, "Free Trade" has a general meaning to the public, and a variety of more specific meanings to other people (like the word anarchy). The general public looks at "free trade" as nothing more than the existence of international trade. Nothing more specific than that. In that sense, we have free trade today, and many people either defend or attack "free trade" on that basis.

Thanks for putting it into perspective.

I guess this is a good example of the dialectic way of thinking, that HB brought up in this thread. (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?t=200121)

KenInMontiMN
07-18-2009, 03:31 PM
http://books.google.com/books?id=mz7zjqHrkHQC&pg=PA1&dq=trading+away+our+future&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=5