Posted on 01/16/2008 4:01:09 AM PST by LowCountryJoe
Rochester
IN the days before Tuesdays Republican presidential primary in Michigan, Mitt Romney and John McCain battled over what the government owes to workers who lose their jobs because of the foreign competition unleashed by free trade. Their rhetoric differed Mr. Romney said he would fight for every single job, while Mr. McCain said some jobs are not coming back but their proposed policies were remarkably similar: educate and retrain the workers for new jobs.
All economists know that when American jobs are outsourced, Americans as a group are net winners. What we lose through lower wages is more than offset by what we gain through lower prices. In other words, the winners can more than afford to compensate the losers. Does that mean they ought to? Does it create a moral mandate for the taxpayer-subsidized retraining programs proposed by Mr. McCain and Mr. Romney?
Um, no. Even if youve just lost your job, theres something fundamentally churlish about blaming the very phenomenon thats elevated you above the subsistence level since the day you were born. If the world owes you compensation for enduring the downside of trade, what do you owe the world for enjoying the upside?
[Snip]
One way to think about that is to ask what your moral instincts tell you in analogous situations. Suppose, after years of buying shampoo at your local pharmacy, you discover you can order the same shampoo for less money on the Web. Do you have an obligation to compensate your pharmacist? If you move to a cheaper apartment, should you compensate your landlord? When you eat at McDonalds, should you compensate the owners of the diner next door? Public policy should not be designed to advance moral instincts that we all reject every day of our lives.
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
No problem
Summary National Income and Product Accounts
Look at Account 5 and Account 7
The answer is simple, if there is not equal exports to imports, the money does not come back.
The money does come back. That's why we have a capital account surplus. That money comes back. As capital.
You agreed this was record keeping and somehow you translate that someone who puts numbers down on paper and creates a report equals money coming back into our economy and you do not, or can not explain how.
No, the numbers on paper document the money coming back.
It is not probable that Tahiti and Hawaii entered into a voluntary agreement to resolve trade disputes by establishing panels of experts chosen by both sides, yes. You’ll have to speak to a cultural anthropologist to determine just when exactly the concept of alternative dispute resolution occurred to humans.
Where did I say that?? The greater the risk the greater the benefit (or loss) is closer to my philosophy. Pyramids and ponzi schemes are very different. Pyramids are not illegal. For that matter not all ponzi schemes are illegal. Social Security is a ponzi scheme.
You really have never actually spent the time to study economics, have you?
Your basis that having a large quantity of exports and little to no imports was one of the foundations of the mercantilist system, which was disproved over two hundred years ago by early economists Adam Smith and David Ricardo.
Simply put, a nation that exports everything and imports little is giving away its production and receiving little to nothing in return. Money itself is a medium of exchange, its value comes from what it is able to be traded for. Having large piles of money would do a country no good whatsoever if the quantity of goods that the money can buy is limited, as such a system would entail.
Why is it that countries that have gone protectionist (large export base, minimum imports) have invariably been miserable failures? India during the mid-20th Century is a prime example of this.
Are you self sufficient? If not, why not?
Have you really never heard of the techniques of monopoly? They have been illegal in this country for a long time now, but not on the international scene.
A new company moves into an area of product distribution with a cut rate price. Everybody buys from them, running the other companies the distribute that product out of business. When the new company has no more competition, it raises the price to the breaking point.
When this is done with a product necessary to the survival of human beings, it is called a "hydraulic empire".
Once we buy cheap foreign over enough time to lose the manufacturing infrastructure and know-how to produce that product, we are in danger of succumbing to that monopoly or "hydraulic empire".
Silliness? I think not.
A nation that produces what we consume doesn't have to be one company; it merely has to be ruled by those willing to close the monopoly.
More "trade is bad" nonsense.
Why the straw man? Trade is not bad. Becoming dependent on foreign production of necessities is bad.
You are wrong.
Prove it.
Once again, where is this monopoly? What is the company's name?
Do you deny that one of, if not the greatest, interest is to produce products with the cheapest labor possible, even if that results in a screwjob of the people in the very country that incorporated it as a limited liability privilege, the balance of the "limited liability" part born by those people?
A distribution monopoly? Like WalMart is a distributor? Or a manufacturing monopoly?
When the new company has no more competition, it raises the price to the breaking point.
Sounds easy. You must have hundreds of examples where that happened.
Really? So the legion of conservative economists that support free trade are actually liberals?
Are you familiar with a logical fallacy termed, “affirming the antecedent?”
I get the notion of sacrificing profit for market share, but I am aware of no game-theorist that argues it's a dominant strategy. In fact (never having attended business school), I'd imagine that people specifically teach otherwise using famous examples.
The problem comes when you take that dominant (100%, LOL!) market share and artificially raise (LOL!) prices. The competition returns. Except for the hundreds of examples I'm sure our friend is compiling for us now.
We could set up a mechanism to resolve the disputes that arise . . . uh, wait a minute.
By the way, I pinged you to a post of mine on another thread and I'm curious as to why you never bothered to answer those questions, instead replying on this thread. were those questions too difficult for you? Did they go over your head?
You do not know the subject matter on the topic you are bringing up. Read this and get back with me. But only after you answer the other post that I pinged you to because I'd like to discuss those questions (and why you ducked them so far), too.
Did it ever occur to you that the person I answered may actually support our regulations and taxes and wanted the other governments' regulation and taxes to mirror our before they would consider trade a good thing amongst the individuals who engage in trade? The willingness to not address their disdain for our regulations and our taxation, first, was telling...that person went straight after the economic liberty as a bad thing first (granted, it wasn't that blatant but it was there!)
Oh, and now I know you were on that thread...TIME FOR SOME ANSWERS!!!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.