Posted on 02/13/2004 6:11:03 AM PST by Deliberator
HARRISBURG, Pa. (Reuters) - Under pressure from fellow Republicans, President Bush distanced himself on Thursday from one of his top economic advisers who said the outsourcing of U.S. jobs to workers overseas may benefit the economy.
"The (economic) numbers are good. But I don't worry about numbers, I worry about people," Bush told students and teachers at a high school in Pennsylvania -- a pivotal state in this year's election and one of the hardest hit by factory job losses during his presidency.
Without mentioning by name the chairman of his Council of Economic Advisers, Gregory Mankiw, Bush said he was concerned "there are people looking for work because jobs have gone overseas" and vowed to "act to make sure there are more jobs at home" by keeping taxes low and by retraining displaced workers. Bush offered no new initiatives to curb outsourcing and aides said he opposed restrictions on free trade.
With political concern about unemployment heating up ahead of the November presidential election, critics have seized on Mankiw's characterization of "outsourcing" by U.S. companies as "something that we should realize is probably a plus for the economy in the long run."
Democrats said his comments and the council's annual report were evidence that the Bush White House is insensitive to the plight of out-of-work Americans.
Senate Democratic leader Tom Daschle predicted Mankiw would quit.
But Democratic Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York said, "This is the economic report of the president and not the economic report of Mr. Mankiw ... We cannot allow our Republican friends to shift the blame and the burden to Mr. Mankiw."
Senate Democrats said they would propose new protections for workers whose employers send their jobs overseas. Their proposal would require that outsourcing companies disclose their plans to their employees and to the Labor Department.
On Wednesday House Speaker Dennis Hastert of Illinois joined the bipartisan chorus of criticism from the U.S. Congress and the campaign trail, saying of Mankiw: "His theory fails a basic test of real economics."
The White House has rebuffed any suggestion that Mankiw resign. "That's kind of laughable," spokesman Scott McClellan said, adding: "Our economic team is doing a great job."
U.S. Commerce Secretary Don Evans defended the comments, telling CNBC: "What he praised was free trade and open trade. Every president since Herbert Hoover (1929-33) has said that free and open trade - as long as it's fair trade - is good for our economy."
At issue is the practice of a growing number of U.S. companies to move all or a portion of their operations to places like Mexico, India and China, where labor costs are lower and goods can be produced more cheaply, in order to improve corporate profits.
Nearly 2.8 million factory jobs have been lost since Bush took office and the issue looms large ahead of November's vote, where victory in rust-belt states like Pennsylvania could be key.
Underscoring its political importance to Bush's re-election, Thursday's visit was his 25th to Pennsylvania as president. He narrowly lost the state in the 2000 election, and analysts say he may have hurt his chances of winning it this year when he scrapped U.S. tariffs on steel imports in December to avert a trade war with Europe.
© Reuters 2004. All Rights Reserved.
That's a handy excuse -- but even if you were right, how about at least junking them and re-using the steel scrap?
I've used the phrase "could be" in purely theoretical terms. The reality is that the world operates under any number of economic "imbalanced conditions" nearly 100% of the time. In fact, the day you think everything is "balanced" is a good time to be concerned -- because in economic terms, "balanced" and "stagnation" are pretty much synonymous.
As for 100% efficiency in growing lettuce, bullhockey.
I used the "100% efficiency" condition to help illustrate how the process would work if we were trading commodities or finished products that weren't as easy to produce (in terms of the labor requirements) as a head of lettuce.
If you were producing commercial bakery ovens and I were producing farm tractors, then doubling your output wouldn't be so easy.
Consider the question again, and for the sake of the argument assume that two heads of lettuce per week is your current capacity. How would you address the problem?
Wal Mart isn't actually outsourcing. They are importing. It might sound like a technicality, but there is a big difference.
The above link says that about 80% of our imports from China are NOT related party trade.
Wal Mart doesn't make what it sells. Its not in the manufacturing business. You can't outsource what you don't do.
Wal Mart merely buys from suppliers and in turn retails the products.
Many of Wal Mart's suppliers are outsourcing, but Wal Mart itself is not.
Better technology for all
Bingo! Go to the head of the class, sir -- you've just identified a tangible "imbalance" along the lines of what I was describing. The auto workers are "helped" because they are able to take advantage of a situation (albeit temporary) in which they can produce cars using recycled steel -- while the workers in the iron and coal mines who would have been producing the steel must suffer on the unemployment line for a period of time because their commodities are not needed.
At the risk of sounding sarcastic, I'll point out that in this case, it is obviously imperative for the U.S. government to dump the vehicles overboad rather than recycle them -- because we must maintain full employment in our economy no matter how inefficient it may be.
What does the phrase "better technology" mean when we're talking about a closed system of two consumer/producers? Are you going to stop growing your lettuce one year and let your child starve while you invent a John Deere combine and some genetically modified Monsanto lettuce seeds?
This isn't intended to be sarcastic -- it simply shows how difficult it is to react to the countless "imbalances" we come across on a regular basis in our economy.
The way I see it, there's only one solution to this problem that may end up working to the advantage of both of us. Give it one more shot!
Sounds good, but maybe not. If you feed it into the hopper too slowly, then the money you save by recycling the material may be offset by the cost of storing the material for a long period of time while waiting for it to be fed into the hopper.
That's right -- but it does change the original problem statement.
Consider this solution:
Based on the original parameters, we really only have a limited number of factors to deal with. We've got a farm (yours), a bakery (mine), a farmer (you), a baker (me), and a child who consumes but does not produce. If we assume that we are both operating at 100% efficiency, then neither one of us has the option of increasing our output. You need two heads of lettuce and two loaves of bread every week, but you can only produce two heads of lettuce (which leaves none to trade for my bread).
The Marxist solution would be for you to assert your right to take one of my loaves of bread without compensating me for it, because you need it more than I do. You may be able to do this to me simply by overpowering me (if you are stronger), but I can assure you that I won't be baking two loaves of bread every week after this happens for the third time. This explains why Marxist states are always reduced to sh!t-holes by the time Marxism runs its course.
The real solution, of course, is that there is no way to meet all of our "needs" under these conditions, but we can make trade-offs in our individual situations that will allow us to allocate our resources in a manner that works out for both of us (hopefully) -- either now or in the future.
My suggestion is that we should both "settle for less" in the short term by making sacrifices for the longer term. Here's the deal: I will provide you with one of my loaves of bread every week (or every other week, or whatever we determine to be fair while keeping me from starving), and you will be permitted to keep both of your heads of lettuce. I will do this for a period of ten years, after which I will own your farm.
The social crusaders out there will call this "exploitation!" and complain about "all the wealth being held in the hands of a few people," but in our example it may work out well for both of us. We'll both make sacrifices in the short term, but we also both have a "goal" to aim for. My goal is to own your farm, at which point I will charge you some kind of rent for staying there (I can't evict you after the ten years, because I'll want your lettuce even after I own you farm -- especially if I haven't had any for ten years!). Your goal, on the other hand, is to trade off one of your major assets (your farm) in exchange for the ability to develop what may end up being an even more valuable (even in purely monetary terms!) asset -- your child.
I may own your farm after ten years, but at that point your child will be able to increase the output of the farm by helping you cultivate your lettuce. If you can produce three heads of lettuce per week with your child, then we've got another "imbalance" that now works in your favor. You can even defer the "payout" on your investment by refraining from having your child work on the farm after he turns ten -- and instead cultivate his interest in science, engineering, etc. By the time he's 20, he may end up with the ability to build that John Deere equipment that will allow you to harvest 200 heads of lettuce a week!
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