Posted on 04/11/2006 1:06:08 PM PDT by TradicalRC
The Fruits of NAFTA
As I write these lines, the big black headline on Drudge reads, Arizona Governor Orders Troops to Mexican Border.
Both Arizona Gov. Janet Napolitano and New Mexicos Bill Richardson have now declared a state of emergency on their border.
Why? Because our border is descending into a state of anarchy, as 5,000 illegal aliens daily attempt to cross our Mexican frontier and drug traffickers, with renegade Mexican army troops sometimes backing them up, attempt to run narcotics into the United States.
It is now a dozen years since NAFTA passed. We can measure its success in the clamor for fences and troops on the border, and in Mexicos having displaced Colombia as the primary source of the marijuana, meth and cocaine flowing into the United States.
But it was the economic argument that our elitesBush I and James Baker, Dole and Gingrich, Clinton and Carterused to sell NAFTA.
In one of the big propaganda pieces of that great debate, NAFTA: An Assessment, an October 1993 paper published by the International Institute of Economics, Gary Hufbauer and Jeffrey Schott wrote: Our job projections reflect a judgment that, with NAFTA, U.S. exports to Mexico will continue to outstrip Mexican exports to the United States, leading to a U.S. trade surplus with Mexico of about $7 to $9 billion annually by 1995.
The authors further predicted the U.S. trade surplus with Mexico would rise to $9 billion to $12 billion a year between 2000 and 2010.
And what happened? Charles McMillion of MGB Services, using Commerce Department data through 2005, has tallied the results.
A year after NAFTA passed, the U.S. trade surplus had vanished. From 1995 through 1998, we ran $20 billion trade deficits with Mexico. From 1999 through 2005, the U.S. trade deficit with Mexico grew every year, from $27 billion in 1999 to last years $54 billion.
Where Hufbauer and Schott had predicted $100-plus billion in trade surpluses with Mexico from 1994 to today, NAFTA delivered some $400 billion in cumulative U.S. trade deficits. A $500 billion mistake by the crack Hufbauer-Schott team.
Is there a silver lining? Are we not selling Mexico high-value items, while she exports to us the products of her less-skilled labor?
Again, the opposite has occurred. When NAFTA passed in 1993, we imported some 225,000 cars and trucks from Mexico, but exported about 500,000 vehicles to the world. In 2005, our exports to the world were still a shade under 500,000 vehicles, but our auto and truck imports from Mexico had tripled to 700,000 vehicles.
As McMillion writes, Mexico now exports more cars and trucks to the United States than the United States exports to the whole world. A fine end, is it not, to the United States as Auto Capital of the World?
What happened? Post-NAFTA, the Big Three just picked up a huge slice of our auto industry and moved it, and the jobs, to Mexico.
Consider the range of items the most advanced nation on earth now sells to Mexico, and Mexico sells to us.
Mexicos leading exports to the United States in 2005 were autos, oil, electrical machinery, computers, furniture, textiles and apparel. The Made-in-the-USA goods that reaped us the greatest revenue in trade with Mexico were plastics, chemicals, cereals, cotton, meat, paper, oil seed, aluminum, copper and knitted or crocheted fabrics.
U.S.-Mexico trade calls to mind the trade relationship between Betsy Ross America and the England of the Industrial Revolution, with Mexico in the role of England. Our exports to Mexico read like a ships manifest from Bangladesh.
The American people were had. NAFTA was never a trade deal. NAFTA was always an enabling actto enable U.S. corporations to dump their American workers and move their factories to Mexico.
For U.S. companies, it was one sweet deal. At zero cost, they were allowed to rid themselves of their American workers; get out from under contributing to Social Security and Medicare; and slough off the burden of environmental, health-and-safety, wage-and-hour and civil-rights lawsand were liberated to go abroad and hire Mexicans who would work for one-fifth to one-tenth of what their unwanted American workers cost.
What NAFTA, GATT, Davos and the WTO have always been about is freeing up transnationals to get rid of First World workers, while assuring them they could hold on, at no cost, to their First World customers.
When one considers who finances the Republican Party, funds its candidates, and hires its former congressmen, senators and Cabinet officers at six- and seven-figure retainers to lobby, it is understandable that the GOP went into the tank.
But why did the liberals, who paid the price of mandating all those benefits for American workers and imposing all those regulations on U.S. corporations, go along? Thats the mystery. About NAFTA there is no mystery. There never really was.
COPYRIGHT 2006 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC.
The new Communist President will get rid of NAFTA in a minute.
NAFTA is really bad. Now we are stuck with 4.7 percent unemployment and rising wages.
Why can't we just be like France?
I thought Nafta was supposed to make lives better in Mexico. I just didn't realize that they meant that our southwest would BE mexico.
Wow you guys are really fast readers. Ten seconds after I posted this, you already had comments and Everything...
Buchanan's numbers may be right, but he's still a demagogic blowhard.
More propaganda from the likes of Pat Buchanan. Anyone who believes we should have let Hitler do his thing doesn't deserve to be read. He is an idiot and a fool.
LOl...yeah, those cheaper goods and services really chap me...
U.S. companies were liberated to go abroad and hire Mexicans who would work for one-fifth to one-tenth of what their unwanted American workers cost.
How exactly does this contribute to people streaming out of Mexico into the US?
Pat makes no sense. NAFTA did nothing to legalize the hiring of illegals in this country.
It's an interesting article. It's really too bad that some folks can't read it and understand the implications. Thanks for the post.
Here's the kind of stuff that really ticks me off:
Mexico's leading exports to the United States in 2005 were autos, oil, electrical machinery, computers, furniture, textiles and apparel. The Made-in-the-USA goods that reaped us the greatest revenue in trade with Mexico were plastics, chemicals, cereals, cotton, meat, paper, oil seed, aluminum, copper and knitted or crocheted fabrics.Completely unverifiable, and even if true . . . shouldn't the proper comparison be how much (in value) of computer or electrical equipment we shipped to each other? What if we shipped 2 computers to Mexico, they shipped us 1, but it was their "largest" export?
16 posted on 03/10/2006 5:43:52 AM PST by 1rudeboy
Ithought the GIANT SUCKING SOUND was to be jobs leaving for Mexico;
Now we find out it is the GIANT SUCKING SOUND of the Mexican poor being sucked into the USA!
Americans buy Japanese cars.
GM is in the tank. GM was the largest corporation in the world at one point. You'd think they would have cashed in on the NAFTA bonanza.
U.S. companies were liberated to go abroad and hire Mexicans who would work for one-fifth to one-tenth of what their unwanted American workers cost.
How exactly does this contribute to people streaming out of Mexico into the US?
Pat makes no sense. NAFTA did nothing to legalize the hiring of illegals in this country
Why not annex Mexico? 12 million Mexican nationals want to be American citizens, so give it to them.
At this point, amnesty and annexation are a difference without a ditinction.
"Why not annex Mexico?"
Crushing endemic social problems that I'm tired of paying for.
Not only attempt. Do run narcotics . . . by the truckload!
And this fall, the Arizona voters, in their sheeple wisdom, will open up the lucrative bootleg cigarette industry to them too.
Time proves Pat is right again and again. Pat is for American citizens first, not investors, not foreign governments. For that he is castigated and smeared and silenced in the print press.
Trade means we buy from you and you buy from us. Then we would build jobs here, improve our standard of living and cease enabling China to buy our government. NAFTA did not perform as advertised.
That is not what you mean and you know it . . . you mean "we buy from you and you buy just as much from us."
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