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The Myth of "Exporting Jobs"
Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | June 27, 2003 | William L. Anderson

Posted on 06/27/2003 8:03:39 AM PDT by Mad Dawgg

The Myth of "Exporting Jobs"

by William L. Anderson

[Posted June 27, 2003]

As U.S. trade deficits continue to pile up, and as the economy continues in its slow-growth patterns, a number of economic commentators have been accusing American corporations of causing the trouble by "exporting jobs." Now, given the bounty of economic myths that economists and media pundits seem to foist upon us, one should not be surprised at anything we read in the academic literature or popular press, but the newest set of fallacies that we are hearing is especially insidious.

In his path-breaking Principles of Economics, Carl Menger writes in the first chapter, "All things are subject to the law of cause and effect." While such a truth seems to be self-evident, one needs to be careful in separating cause and effect or determining the correct line of causality. Unfortunately, the modern pundits are guilty of convoluting the order of things; thus, we hear nonsensical things like trade deficits are the result of budget deficits or that free exchange creates an overall decrease in a country's standard of living. As usual, the "experts" blame business leaders while politicians and bureaucrats are given a free pass.

This is not a standard article on defense of free trade; writers in the Austrian tradition like Murray Rothbard, Henry Hazlitt, and Mark Brandly have eloquently explained the process and have painstakingly pointed out why attempts to throw sand in the gears of trading relations between individuals can only make matters worse, and I do not think I can improve on their work.

However, the "newest" set of challenges to free trade, some from the right and some from the left, need to be answered. Furthermore, we need to point out why U.S. businesses continue to look overseas for investment opportunities and give a reasonable explanation as to why trying to block such activity will only make things worse in this country.

The first and most important thing to point out here is that the phrase "exporting jobs" is a misnomer. A job is not a good, nor is it a service, so it cannot be imported or exported. Only goods can fit that terminology, and one can neither purchase nor sell a job, so to say that U.S. corporations are "exporting jobs" is at best to be using economic language in a sloppy and inaccurate way; at worst, it is yet another contribution to the Keynesian morass that pervades modern economic thinking. (One can exchange things like labor and capital, but neither of those are jobs. The term "job" is a formal designation we give to action associated with the creation of goods, but they are not goods themselves.)

That being said, there are serious problems for which advocates of free trade are being blamed—when, in reality, the failure of government to permit free trade within the borders of the United States is ground zero. Far from causing our standard of living to deteriorate, real free trade would permit new economic opportunities not only for people at home, but also for people abroad.

The first question one asks is why U.S. corporations choose to do more and more of their investing overseas, as opposed to investment being centered within our borders. To say that corporations simply are chasing after cheap labor is only partially correct, as there is more to successful capital investing than finding workers willing to toil for peanuts. If that were truly the case, as critics of the left and right are charging, then low-wage backwaters like Rwanda and Zimbabwe would receive the lion's share of investments from the West.

That individuals and corporations do not choose to invest simply where labor is cheapest should be obvious to people, since most capital development originating from western business owners is done either in other western countries or the more economically advanced regions in Asia. Moreover, the decision to invest apart from one's home country is a much more complicated affair than the critics may be saying.

Things like language and cultural barriers, as well as changes in the legal environment are important items for firm managers and owners to consider when they are deciding whether or not to invest huge sums of money into a place. Transportation facilities and costs, as well as proximity to a certain market also fall into the decision matrix.

I mention these things because overseas investing by American firms has been especially targeted by individuals on both the right and the left who see something sinister in a U.S. company shutting down some operations in this country to locate them where labor is cheaper. (If one recalls, the most repeated line from the 1992 U.S. presidential election was independent Ross Perot's "giant sucking sound" that would be heard if Mexico and this country were to liberalize trade.)

Economist Paul Craig Roberts, who has devoted a number of his syndicated columns to trade issues, writes that the relatively free flow of capital, technology, and information (what he calls "outsourcing") across international borders is not the same as the free flow of traded goods. He writes:

Trade implies reciprocity. It is a two-way street. There is no reciprocity in outsourcing, only the export of domestic jobs. That's why the United States is currently running a $125 billion trade deficit with China alone, a Third World country. . . . An economy can, of course, stand some outsourcing. But when goods and services in general are outsourced, where is the economy?[i]

Roberts has written elsewhere that production of goods creates wealth because of the "value added" process of manufacturing. For example, a tree is first cut down, then sent to the sawmill, then made into lumber, and finally into the finished product of a house, furniture, or whatever it may be. At each stage, there is "value added" to the raw material.

While no doubt there are changes at each stage of manufacturing and distribution, the "value added" concept has no place in economic thinking and clearly is at odds with Menger's emphasis that the value of the factors of production emanates from the value of the final product. In other words, value flows from the final product backwards (or downwards), not upwards, as Roberts suggests. To put it another way, the concept of "value added" is something used for accounting purposes, but is not a true form of economic measurement.

Beyond that, there are other problems with Robert's analysis—although I also need to add that the prospect of manufacturing more and more things overseas does have implications at home, things with which I will deal (and find that Roberts in this area has some important and insightful things to say). The first deals with the notion that if we "ship out" all jobs, we will somehow have nothing to do.

For many years, economics has been plagued with the "lump of jobs" fallacy in which it is believed there are only a limited amount of things to do and once they are done, people have no means of employment. The truth is the polar opposite; there literally are an infinite number of things that must be done. As Alchian and Allen have noted in their 1983 book Exchange and Production, the elimination of some tasks due to improved methods of productivity frees up scarce labor to do other things. That, they point out, is how an economy grows, a simple truth that seems to have escaped most of the economics profession.

However, while Roberts no doubt agrees with that assessment, his point cannot be ignored. Take my present home of Cumberland, Maryland, for example. During the latter half of the 19th Century and for much of the 20th Century, Cumberland was a manufacturing center and home to many firms. However, following World War II, firms closed down here and either have gone out of business or relocated.

That phenomenon has changed the face of employment here. In its manufacturing heyday, people in Cumberland (which had twice the population it has today) were relatively well off compared to people elsewhere in this country. Today, while most people enjoy a standard of living that is absolutely higher than people here enjoyed five decades ago, they are relatively poorer compared with people in other cities. Furthermore, the economic future here seems to be more of the same.

While the changes here have been somewhat tragic, there are reasons why they occurred. First, this area for many years has been strongly pro-union, and few manufacturers and investors want to deal with labor unions if they can avoid it. Second, the State of Maryland has a leftist government and over the years has proven itself to be extremely hostile to private enterprise and private property. Third, as Maryland's economic position has deteriorated, the state government has taken an even more active role in trying to make up the difference, which means high taxes, bureaucracy, and other such barriers to private investment.

Roberts himself points out that the relatively well-educated but low-earning laborers of many Asian countries gain an advantage to workers in this country because of our legal situation. He writes:

The advantage (of foreign workers) increases with the absence of tort lawyer extortions and harassing and fining IRS, EPA, OSHA, EEOC and other regulatory bureaucracies, whose budgets demand a never ending supply of wrongdoers to be penalized.[ii]

In one sense, the Law of Comparative Advantage still holds. If workers overseas own a comparative advantage to workers here because of the predations of U.S. national, state, and local governments, it still is a comparative advantage and one cannot fault people for taking advantage of that situation. However, we must add that such a situation is self-inflicted. If U.S. workers want to price themselves out of market after market, they are free to do so, but must pay the consequences.

(The current federal harassment of Martha Stewart is another example of this phenomenon in action. The economic meaning of this episode to other investors, entrepreneurs, and executives is that doing well in the United States will lead to one's being targeted by prosecutors and tort lawyers. The end result is less investment here, which ultimately means that Americans are wildly cheering themselves into a long-term condition of a lower standard of living.)

Without the regulatory burdens that American firms typically face, much more manufacturing would go on here. To restrict people from closing operations or investing overseas, as Patrick Buchanan has urged, would only make things worse, however. First, the imposition of even more restrictions, regulations, and legal burdens would simply discourage investment; such policies ultimately would have the effect of chilling the creation of new goods. Second, the low cost of overseas manufacturing at least means lower costs for goods here. Eliminate that possibility and we have the prospect of no jobs and fewer goods at home.

To put it another way, U.S. policies already in place lead to fewer economic opportunities. Choking off the possibility of overseas investment will not improve the situation here. In this case, Buchanan is presenting a false choice: he declares that if firms in this country are forbidden to invest in other firms, they will invest the same amounts of money here. That simply is not true.

On one last issue, Roberts also has written that the growth of U.S. agriculture sales abroad is proof that we are becoming a Third World economy. Given the nature of vast growing lands in this country, that is not an accurate assessment of things. Not only does this country enjoy the lands where agriculture can thrive, but also his picture of U.S. farming being a low-tech, peasant-like activity is also false.

Farming in this country is both capital intensive and extremely high-tech. A productive U.S. farm cannot be compared with a small plot of land worked by peasants in India. Granted, this leaves out the discussion of environmental regulations, farm subsidies, and the irresponsible government distribution of water in arid regions to agricultural entities located in the western states, but to say that the production of food somehow is a lowly thing is a bit silly and ignores the scientific advancements that have been made in this area.

In short, Roberts is partly correct. Policies pushed by politicians and bureaucrats in this country have eliminated many economic opportunities. The answer, however, is not to close off our borders, but to close off the government. We cannot have big, intrusive government and a healthy economy at the same time.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

William Anderson, an adjunct scholar of the Mises Institute, teaches economics at Frostburg State University. Send him MAIL. See his Mises.org Articles Archive.

[i] Paul Craig Roberts, “Notes for Free Traders,” March 5, 2003.

[ii] Ibid.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Extended News; Government
KEYWORDS: freetrade; leftwingactivists; mises
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To: MelBelle
People who write articles like this have no clue about anything. The more people we put out of work here the bigger the deficits and bankruptcies, etc. People who think our corporations are not out to screw us are stupid. They are only there to do one thing, make money, and if they have to do that by screwing the american public which created them, they have no problem doing that.
41 posted on 06/27/2003 9:26:42 AM PDT by samuel_adams_us
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To: Search4Truth
You are sooo right about the work ethic. A doctor I work with told me when she visits family in India, they expect her to bring them lots of goodies because she is American and therefore "rich".

She told me how envious they are and how they don't realize how hard Americans work to get what they have.

These people expect to have things fall into their lap with very little effort on their part.

having said that, the unions in this country have ruined the work ethic of many Americans as well.

42 posted on 06/27/2003 9:27:54 AM PDT by DLfromthedesert
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To: Garrisson Lee
Absolutely, GL, I have said it on this forum before. We no longer have the luxury of living where we would like or close to family. If we want to have a certain standard of living, we have to go where the opportunities are.

I see many on this forum complaining about lack of jobs and they live in a town with 60,000 people. Well, those places generally lack opportunity.

I live in the 5th largest city in the US. Do I really want to? No. I would like to live in a town somewhere with about 10,000 people but unfortunately I need to eat.

43 posted on 06/27/2003 9:30:22 AM PDT by riri
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To: Mad Dawgg
The root problem is the alienation of labor. As Chesterton correctly pointed out, our current economic system ought to be called "proletarianism" instead of "capitalism", since it depends on the existence of a proletariat (i.e. a vast class of persons who have nothing with which to produce income except their own labor). As long as the average person has to work at a job -- in other words, exchange his labor for money by working at a company he does not own -- we will see nothing but more job losses. Like it or not, labor is a commodity, and in a global market the laws of supply and demand will tend to drive wages down in each industry until that industry's labor costs reach their natural prices. And in a world full of Third-World peasants hungry for work, the natural price for labor in any given industry could be very low indeed.

Right now, the nations of the world are opening their economies, creating a global free market where capital (and the jobs it creates) is free to move wherever the cost of labor is lowest. The alternatives to this system are stark: we could try autarky, which would mean closing our borders to all international trade and becoming self-sufficient (I'm not sure if such a state of affairs is even possible); we could try protectionism -- tarriffs and the like -- which would ignite a global trade war; we could allow trade unions to bid up the price of domestic labor, which would only accelerate the process of exporting jobs; or we could institute a high federal minimum wage, which would tend to accelerate the process of importing illegal immigrants.

Or we could cut the Gordian knot and try addressing the root of the problem: the existence of a large class of people who own no capital and must trade their labor to live. This idea is the basis of Distributism, an economic theory advocated by Chesterton, Belloc and others about a century ago. Its thesis: the more widely distributed the capital within a given economy is, the more stable and just that economy will be. Distributism has nothing to do with the State ownership of capital, as advocated by Marx, et al.; instead, it champions private ownership of capital, in as wide a distribution as possible, via family-owned small businesses organized and regulated by trade guilds.

An economy which is largely composed of independent small business owners, each working for him/herself, instead of an economy largely composed of quasi-monopolistic global corporations, free to hire and fire propertyless workers at will -- which has more potential over the long term? I'm curious to see what FR readers think.

44 posted on 06/27/2003 9:31:42 AM PDT by B-Chan (Catholic. Monarchist. Texan. Any questions?)
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To: narby
The "global economy" is growing faster than at any time in human history. Our American economy isn't growing fantastically, but it IS growing.

Our economy is growing? LOL, your not kidding no one. Almost *everyone* I speak with is making less money now, than they were 5 years ago, and many others are completely out of work. Most companies have cut their employee force, and have not filled or rehired those people back. The employees that are left are working twice as hard for the same or less money now. And instead of regular raises, the corportate drones sit around thinking of ways to give them puny bonuses or prizes in lieu of real raises, while cutting their benefits.

Most employees in the work place now are under daily, thinly veiled threat of losing their jobs if they don't work fast and harder.

While the economy in third world countrys is growing dramatically. Nations where people lived in mud huts 50 years ago now are developing genuine middle classes who are quickly beginning to participate in consumerisim where they used to live off the rice they planted.

And as they are giving all of our manufacturing jobs to communist third world countries, how is this helping America?

45 posted on 06/27/2003 9:32:09 AM PDT by Joe Hadenuf (RECALL DAVIS, position his smoking chair over a trapdoor, a memo for the next governor.)
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To: Mad Dawgg
Whoever wrote this article is a complete idiot, exportation of jobs happens every day its not a myth. The minute a branch of work pays well, its not long before its exported overseas... IT is just the latest in a long line of this.
46 posted on 06/27/2003 9:33:08 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: Garrisson Lee
Frankly, I'm beaten.

The good news is that if you had a job the employer would have to treat you well by government standards.

The bad news is that cost to employers to comply with government standards has killed employment.

47 posted on 06/27/2003 9:34:37 AM PDT by Voltage
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To: riri
When the lovely Mrs. Lee talked me into moving here, she won the arguement by pointing out we were within a forty minute drive to boston, twenty to Providence and right next to the "booming" 495 corridor.

I wouldn't have believed how severely things would change.

I'll come up with something eventually. It just takes longer to get back up every time you are knocked to the floor. Turning fifty today hasn't helped at all.

48 posted on 06/27/2003 9:40:04 AM PDT by Garrisson Lee
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To: Voltage
"The bad news is that cost to employers to comply with government standards has killed employment."

Eggsactly Batman!

We own a small family Corporation with a few different businesses under the Corp. (Floor Coverning, Hobby Store, etc.) We could expand our businesses and hire more people but with the damned taxes and paperwork and ridiculous hoops one has to jump through it is easier to invest in Bonds and such.

One of my more liberal associates told me it was un-american to not expand my business. He told me it was my duty to hire more people.

Nope, sorry, it isn't my duty to take care of others, it is my duty to take care of my business in the way I see fit! And, as soon as the government tells me different then I am selling out and not doing a damned thing!

49 posted on 06/27/2003 9:43:17 AM PDT by Mad Dawgg (French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
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To: Voltage
The bad news is I have three jobs. All are part time and except for sometimes at the bar, when I get to twist some loudmouth rich brats, they suck.
50 posted on 06/27/2003 9:44:32 AM PDT by Garrisson Lee
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To: HamiltonJay
The minute a branch of work pays well, its not long before its exported overseas
Exactly. And no amount of reducing our legal expenses will cut back a $35/hr job down to $2/hr.
What's the long term incentive for opening a business here if you know it'll be offshored in 6-12 months if it is a decent idea? For all the talk about cutting dividend taxes to spurn long term economic growth, we're reducing that incentive by making highly desirable to fire people as soon as possible.
51 posted on 06/27/2003 9:46:57 AM PDT by lelio
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To: lelio
"Yes, like cleaning a rich guy's pool. Right now no one will do it for less than $10/hr"

L, If the dirty scummy job isn't worth that, then perhaps the rich man and/or his kids can do it in their spare time. Peace and love, George.

52 posted on 06/27/2003 9:55:32 AM PDT by George Frm Br00klyn Park (FREEDOM!!!!!!!!!)
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To: lelio
"Yes, like cleaning a rich guy's pool. Right now no one will do it for less than $10/hr"

L, If the dirty scummy job isn't worth that, then perhaps the rich man and/or his kids can do it in their spare time. Peace and love, George.

53 posted on 06/27/2003 9:55:38 AM PDT by George Frm Br00klyn Park (FREEDOM!!!!!!!!!)
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To: Mad Dawgg
Roberts has written elsewhere that production of goods creates wealth because of the "value added" process of manufacturing. For example, a tree is first cut down, then sent to the sawmill, then made into lumber, and finally into the finished product of a house, furniture, or whatever it may be. At each stage, there is "value added" to the raw material.
 
While no doubt there are changes at each stage of manufacturing and distribution, the "value added" concept has no place in economic thinking and clearly is at odds with Menger's emphasis that the value of the factors of production emanates from the value of the final product. In other words, value flows from the final product backwards (or downwards), not upwards, as Roberts suggests. To put it another way, the concept of "value added" is something used for accounting purposes, but is not a true form of economic measurement.

William Anderson's logic is flawed. He mistaking confuses the concept of wealth creation, which by definition requires a physical change to a good to elevate it's value in the market, with the nonproductive concept of "flow" or wealth "transference".

The simple act of exchanging one good for another, barter or trade creates nothing. You can exchange the same goods back and forth all day long among thousands of people, for days, weeks, months, years, centuries and not create any wealth. Oh, some of the traders may be more shrewd than others and accumulate more wealth than others through the series of wealth transfers. But absolutely NO wealth is created UNLESS somebody engages in value-added activities to produce more goods.

William Anderson has proven himself to be a shill for politically motivated junk economics. His employment as an instructor at Frostburg State University should be terminated. And all his former students should file a class action lawsuit against him for professional malpractice.

WEALTH: The net ownership of material possessions and productive resources. In other words, the difference between physical and financial assets that you own and the liabilities that you owe. Wealth includes all of the tangible consumer stuff that you possess, like cars, houses, clothes, jewelry, etc.; any financial assets, like stocks, bonds, bank accounts, that you lay claim to; and your ownership of resources, including labor, capital, and natural resources. Of course, you must deduct any debts you owe.

VALUE ADDED: The increase in the value of a good at each stage of the production process. The value that's being increased is specifically the ability of a good to satisfy wants and needs either directly as a consumption good or indirectly as a capital good. A good that provides greater satisfaction has greater value. In essence, the whole purpose of production is to transform raw materials and natural resources that have relatively little value into goods and services that have greater value.

SERVICE: An activity that provides direct satisfaction of wants and needs without the production of a tangible product or good. Examples include information, entertainment, and education. This term good should be contrasted with the term good, which involves the satisfaction of wants and needs with tangible items. You're likely to see the plural combination of these two into a single phrase, "goods and services," to indicate the wide assortment of economic production from the economy's scarce resources.

Wealth is created only by engaging in value-added activities. By the same token, Service sector activities do not create wealth, they merely transfer, redistribute and eventually dissipate wealth as consumption. Thus, as value-added activities move offshore and the U.S. labor force shifts to the Service Sector, wealth is dissipated, not created. And the U.S. standard of living declines as a result.
54 posted on 06/27/2003 9:57:22 AM PDT by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: Mad Dawgg
Walter Williams has a good take on theis 'trade devicit' buisness. You have a 100% 'trade deficit' with your local supermarket- they buy nothing back from you.

But you do get goods for your money, so what is the problem? They get money- we get goods in return.
55 posted on 06/27/2003 10:25:05 AM PDT by Mr. K (where oh where did my little fishy go?)
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To: Willie Green
"Thus, as value-added activities move offshore and the U.S. labor force shifts to the Service Sector, wealth is dissipated, not created. And the U.S. standard of living declines as a result."

Really? Please explain why the USA standard of living is higher today then oh say 30 years ago or 20 or even 10!

56 posted on 06/27/2003 10:31:43 AM PDT by Mad Dawgg (French: old Europe word meaning surrender)
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To: Mad Dawgg
The minute you couple Nationalism with Capitalism the Free Market is no longer!

Right- that would be Fascism.
57 posted on 06/27/2003 10:32:15 AM PDT by ffusco (Cave Canum!)
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To: Willie Green
Service is an activity that produces wealth in the form of time saved, by the consumer of those services not having to do that service on his own- time = money.

An accountant doesn't produce a tangible good- other than a filed return- yet saves you from doing your taxes.
58 posted on 06/27/2003 10:35:38 AM PDT by ffusco (Cave Canum!)
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To: Mr. K
You have a 100% 'trade deficit' with your local supermarket- they buy nothing back from you.

Every time someone suggests making other countries buy $1 of goods/services from America for every $1 we spend on goods and services from other countries.

I propose using the same proposal for people buying stuff from their supermarket. I never seem to get a straight answer.

59 posted on 06/27/2003 10:36:08 AM PDT by Poohbah (I must be all here, because I'm not all there!)
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To: Mad Dawgg
Less goods are produced locally for sure, but the cost of those goods keeps falling relative to earning power.
60 posted on 06/27/2003 10:37:07 AM PDT by ffusco (Cave Canum!)
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