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30th December 07 - Paul Krugman, New York Times
While the United States has long imported oil and other raw materials from
the third world, we used to import manufactured goods mainly from other rich
countries like Canada, European nations and Japan.
But recently we crossed an important watershed: we now import more
manufactured goods from the third world than from other advanced economies. That
is, a majority of our industrial trade is now with countries that are much
poorer than we are and that pay their workers much lower wages.
For the world economy as a whole — and especially for poorer nations —
growing trade between high-wage and low-wage countries is a very good thing.
Above all, it offers backward economies their best hope of moving up the income
ladder.
But for American workers the story is much less positive. In fact, it’s hard
to avoid the conclusion that growing U.S. trade with third world countries
reduces the real wages of many and perhaps most workers in this country. And
that reality makes the politics of trade very difficult.
Let’s talk for a moment about the economics.
Trade between high-wage countries tends to be a modest win for all, or almost
all, concerned. When a free-trade pact made it possible to integrate the U.S.
and Canadian auto industries in the 1960s, each country’s industry concentrated
on producing a narrower range of products at larger scale. The result was an
all-round, broadly shared rise in productivity and wages.
By contrast, trade between countries at very different levels of economic
development tends to create large classes of losers as well as winners.
Although the outsourcing of some high-tech jobs to India has made headlines,
on balance, highly educated workers in the United States benefit from higher
wages and expanded job opportunities because of trade. For example, ThinkPad
notebook computers are now made by a Chinese company, Lenovo, but a lot of
Lenovo’s research and development is conducted in North Carolina.
But workers with less formal education either see their jobs shipped overseas
or find their wages driven down by the ripple effect as other workers with
similar qualifications crowd into their industries and look for employment to
replace the jobs they lost to foreign competition. And lower prices at Wal-Mart
aren’t sufficient compensation.
All this is textbook international economics: contrary to what people
sometimes assert, economic theory says that free trade normally makes a country
richer, but it doesn’t say that it’s normally good for everyone. Still, when the
effects of third-world exports on U.S. wages first became an issue in the 1990s,
a number of economists — myself included — looked at the data and concluded that
any negative effects on U.S. wages were modest.
The trouble now is that these effects may no longer be as modest as they
were, because imports of manufactured goods from the third world have grown
dramatically — from just 2.5 percent of G.D.P. in 1990 to 6 percent in 2006.
And the biggest growth in imports has come from countries with very low
wages. The original “newly industrializing economies” exporting manufactured
goods — South Korea, Taiwan, Hong Kong and Singapore — paid wages that were
about 25 percent of U.S. levels in 1990. Since then, however, the sources of our
imports have shifted to Mexico, where wages are only 11 percent of the U.S.
level, and China, where they’re only about 3 percent or 4 percent.
There are some qualifying aspects to this story. For example, many of those
made-in-China goods contain components made in Japan and other high-wage
economies. Still, there’s little doubt that the pressure of globalization on
American wages has increased.
So am I arguing for protectionism? No. Those who think that globalization is
always and everywhere a bad thing are wrong. On the contrary, keeping world
markets relatively open is crucial to the hopes of billions of people.
But I am arguing for an end to the finger-wagging, the accusation either of
not understanding economics or of kowtowing to special interests that tends to
be the editorial response to politicians who express skepticism about the
benefits of free-trade agreements.
It’s often claimed that limits on trade benefit only a small number of
Americans, while hurting the vast majority. That’s still true of things like the
import quota on sugar. But when it comes to manufactured goods, it’s at least
arguable that the reverse is true. The highly educated workers who clearly
benefit from growing trade with third-world economies are a minority, greatly
outnumbered by those who probably lose.
As I said, I’m not a protectionist. For the sake of the world as a whole, I
hope that we respond to the trouble with trade not by shutting trade down, but
by doing things like strengthening the social safety net. But those who are
worried about trade have a point, and deserve some respect.
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