Trade Nothink
Paul Craig Roberts
Wednesday, Aug. 20, 2003
Sending me many suggestions, readers have beseeched me to revive
the "nothink nation" theme that I developed in six columns during April and
May of 2002. I doubt that editors have that big a stomach for the subject,
but I will risk one more column.
My target is Bruce Bartlett's syndicated column of Aug. 14,
"Manufacturing is not in trouble."
Like neocons who label people concerned with the facts of the
case for the invasion of Iraq as "anti-American left-wing extremists,"
Bartlett labels me a protectionist "on the right-wing fringe" for factually
reporting the shrinking manufacturing sector of our economy and for asking
if the shrinkage is occurring for reasons that have nothing to do with the
case for free trade.
Bartlett tells his readers that "manufacturing output is very
healthy" because "real goods production as a share of real GDP is close to
its all-time high." Here we have a massive confusion. "Real goods
production" is NOT "manufacturing output." "Real goods production" includes
commercial and residential construction a large share of GDP and a
non-traded item plus agricultural production, plus oil and mineral
production, plus manufacturing production.
Obviously, the behavior of "real goods production" can be
different from the behavior of manufacturing output.
Another problem overlooked by Bartlett is the well-known problem
of measuring constant unit of services.
To understand what is happening to manufacturing, it is
necessary to compare, year by year, the share of manufacturing income in
current dollars as a percentage of GDP. This measure has no adjustment
problems and is independent of manufacturing employment.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis provides such a table. It shows
that manufacturing's share of GDP has fallen consistently each year from
19.2 percent in 1988 to 14.1 percent in 2001, a decline of 27 percent over
the 14 year period.
If this decline continues, manufacturing output will be hard to
find in the GDP.
The question I raise is: What is causing this decline? If we
assume that the decline is due to other countries outcompeting us in traded
manufactured goods, we can conclude that it is merely the benevolent
workings of free trade and that the United States is gaining in some other
way that more than compensates for the losses specific to manufacturing.
On the other hand, if the decline is not due to free trade, then
perhaps we have a problem.
As Professor Roy J. Ruffin writes, the key assumption of trade
theory is "that factors of production must be internationally immobile in
order for comparative advantage to reign supreme," as David Ricardo, the
discoverer of the principle on which free trade is based, recognized.
If factors of production are internationally mobile, they will
flow to countries that have the greatest absolute advantage. These countries
will capture all the gains, and the other countries will lose.
In Ricardo's time, agricultural output was a large component of
GDP. Advantage lay in climate and geography clearly internationally
immobile factors of production. With the collapse of world socialism in the
1980s, factors of production capital, technology, business know-how
have become highly mobile. Are these factors of production flowing to
countries with the greatest advantage: Asia's low labor costs?
What about labor itself? Have the Internet and offshore
production by U.S. firms for their U.S. markets made foreign labor highly
mobile to U.S. labor markets, just as if Asians poured across our borders
and offered their services at Asian wages in our domestic labor markets?
If the mobility of factors of production is what it appears to
be, there is a different explanation for the decline of U.S. manufacturing,
one that cannot be dismissed as the benevolent workings of free trade:
Mobile factors of production are flowing to the greatest advantage cheap
Asian labor. When U.S. firms replace their software engineers with foreign
engineers and close (or don't build) plants in the United States, locating
instead in China, what is being traded? Isn't this merely a direct
substitution of foreign labor for U.S. labor in the production functions of
U.S. firms? Haven't factors of production flowed to the countries with the
greatest absolute advantage?
Free traders need to stop jerking their knees and come to grips
with these questions.
Some modern trade theorists take the position that comparative
advantage can still operate even if all factors of production are
internationally mobile, as long as productive factors are less mobile than
traded goods. But even these conditions might no longer be present. Traded
goods must be shipped and are, therefore, less mobile than technology,
capital, and knowledge-based labor skills, all of which can move with the
speed of modern communications. When U.S. firms substitute foreign labor for
U.S. labor, the firms have, in effect, made foreign labor mobile to the
United States without foreigners having to physically move here.
There is a difference between domestic and foreign labor
competing against one another indirectly in the market for traded goods and
services, and the direct substitution of foreign labor for domestic labor in
the production functions of firms producing for the domestic market.
It is past time for free traders to stop jerking their knees, to
put on their thinking caps and to exit their nothink existence.
Dr. Roberts' latest book, "The Tyranny of Good Intentions," has been published by Prima Publishers.
Copyright 2003 Creators Syndicate, Inc.
Editor's note:
Sir John Templeton reveals how to profit during bad times – Click Here Now