Posted on 08/19/2003 10:13:15 AM PDT by luckydevi
Exporting Jobs by Walter Williams (August 19, 2003)
Summary: It'd make far more sense for Americans to start attacking the real sources that have contributed to making foreign operations more attractive to those at home. It's more effective than caving to the rhetoric of leftist and rightist interventionists who mislead us with slogans like, "How can any American worker compete with workers paid one and two dollars an hour?" when in reality our real competition is mostly with European workers earning a lot more.
[www.CapitalismMagazine.com]
Among George Orwell's insightful observations, there's one very worthy of attention: "But if thought corrupts language, language can also corrupt thought." Let's look at a few examples of corrupted language, thought and information.
Pretend you're a customs inspection agent. There's a cargo container awaiting a ship bound for foreign shores. You ask the shipper, who works for a big corporation, what's in the container. He answers, "It's a couple of thousand jobs that we're exporting overseas to a low-wage country."
What questions might you ask? How about, "What kind of jobs are in the container?" or, "Are they America's high-paying jobs?" Most people would probably say: "You're an idiot! You can't bundle up jobs and ship them overseas!"
A job is not a good or service; it can't be imported or exported. A job is an action, an act of doing a task. The next time a right- or left-wing politician or union leader talks about exporting jobs overseas, maybe we should ask him whether he thinks Congress should enact a law mandating U.S. Customs Service seizure of shipping containers filled with American jobs.
Let's turn to the next part of the exporting jobs nonsense, namely that corporations are driven solely by the prospect of low wages. Let's begin with a question: Is the bulk of U.S. corporation overseas investment, and hence employment of foreigners, in high-wage countries, or is it in low-wage countries?
The statistics for 1996 are: Out of total direct U.S. overseas investment of $796 billion, nearly $400 billion was made in Europe (England received 18 percent of it), next was Canada ($91 billion), then Asia ($140 billion), Middle East ($9 billion) and Africa ($7.6 billion). Foreign employment by U.S. corporations exhibited a similar pattern, with most workers hired in high-wage countries such as England, Germany and the Netherlands. Far fewer workers were hired in low-wage countries such as Thailand, Colombia and Philippines, the exception being Mexico.
The facts give a different story from the one we hear from the left-wing and right-wing anti-free trade movement. These demagogues would have us believe that U.S. corporations are rushing to exploit the cheap labor in places like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Rwanda and Ethiopia. Surely with average wages in these countries as low as $10 per month, it would be a darn sight cheaper than locating in England, Germany and Canada, where average wages respectively are: $12, $17 and $16 an hour.
Let's look at a few of the reasons why some U.S. corporations choose to carry their operations overseas. Much of it can be summed up in a phrase: less predatory government and the absence of tort-lawyer extortion. While foreign governments can't be held guiltless of predation, their forms of predation might be cheaper to deal with than those of our EEOC, OSHA, EPA and IRS. Plus, tort lawyer extortion and harassment in foreign countries is a tiny fraction of ours. With each tort lawyer extortion and expansion of predatory regulations at federal, state or local levels of government, foreign operations become more attractive to U.S. corporations. Free trade helps make those costs explicit. American workers are just about the most productive in the world -- however, our government and legal establishment have reduced that productive advantage.
It'd make far more sense for Americans to start attacking the real sources that have contributed to making foreign operations more attractive to those at home. It's more effective than caving to the rhetoric of leftist and rightist interventionists who mislead us with slogans like, "How can any American worker compete with workers paid one and two dollars an hour?" when in reality our real competition is mostly with European workers earning a lot more.
And you can rest assured that the overwhelming majority of Chileans are happy he felt that way today.
Gotta love the excuse-making on FR. Beautiful. "Poverty causes crime and lack of morals." Straight out of Ralph Nader land.
That's weird. Because in the 1960s my roommate's father laid down in a fishing boat one night and escaped out of Communist China into Hong Kong, later making it to America. I don't think you get much more of a low/semi skilled type than he was. Yet he later got an MBA at an Ivy League School. Then again, he became a Christian after making it to America, about the same time the black and white leftist leaders that took over the black communities talked them out of that crazy notion for the most part. Poverty is about the lamest excuse for crime and amorality I've ever heard of.
Wow... if you think hope comes from a job, you might want to check re-check your manual. As far as I know, no one in America has ever been denied hope. Some of had it tough, sure, but "no hope"... never heard of it here.
I know you very deeply resent the thought that this could be the lot of white people .and
I know you would like to believe, "Well, that just's because those people have no moral character. That could never happen to white people."
Please don't tell me that you can't see that these are blatant accusations of racism directed at me and others.
I believe it will lead to the weakening of the nation-state and we will look to undemocratically elected organizations such as the WTO, etc.
It's a brave new world and you seem to be comfortable with the idea of a weakened United States. You seem to like the idea of our wealth being redistributed all over the world. And most of all you seem to really like the idea of Americans brought down a few pegs. That is just competely incomprehensible to me.
Should read
Globalization will ultimately mean the responsibility of important decisions that used to be determined via democratic processes and institutions will no longer rest with in this country. Democracy cannot exist beyond the nation-state:
That's fine, we'll see. Your crowd has been predicting this for awhile though. And just so you know, the WTO has no authority over anything we do whatsoever.
It's a brave new world and you seem to be comfortable with the idea of a weakened United States.
Not at all. That's why I'm happy we've never been more powerful economically and militarily. Ever. And I want to keep it that way. That's why I support the U.S. being free-market capitalist, no matter what anyone else wants to do.
Ha. So on one hand the most moral and church-going time in our country was when people were poor, yet when people are poor they have "nothing to lose" and crime goes up? Which is it?
The Calvanistic approach to society is unworkable, and leads to revelutions and upheavals.
Ummm... you do realize that the original Americans were overwhelmingly more Calvinist than they were Catholic, right?
You've got it all backwards. He is accusing me of being a racist. Let's be perfectly clear. In no way, shape, or form have I ever posted anything that could remotely be construed as implying that the problems of the inner city are a product of someone's skin color, or would be confined to a particular skin color.
I'm confused. Isn't this what you have been saying?
Drugs, prostitution etc? These are the ultimate free market/free trade things. For free traders everything is for sale, their country, people, everything.
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