Posted on 02/15/2006 10:42:45 AM PST by SirLinksalot
Our hollow prosperity
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Posted: February 15, 2006 1:00 a.m. Eastern
PATRICK BUCHANAN
© 2006 Creators Syndicate Inc.
Now that the U.S. trade deficit for 2005 has come in at $726 billion, the fourth straight all-time record, a question arises.
What constitutes failure for a free-trade policy? Or is there no such thing? Is free trade simply right no matter the results?
Last year, the United States ran a $202 billion trade deficit with China, the largest ever between two nations. We ran all-time record trade deficits with OPEC, the European Union, Japan, Canada and Latin America. The $50 billion deficit with Mexico was the largest since NAFTA passed and also the largest in history.
When NAFTA was up for a vote in 1993, the Clintonites and their GOP fellow-travelers said it would grow our trade surplus, raise Mexico's standard of living and reduce illegal immigration.
None of this happened. Indeed, the opposite occurred. Mexico's standard of living is lower than it was in 1993, the U.S. trade surplus has vanished, and America is being invaded. Mexico is now the primary source of narcotics entering the United States.
Again, when can we say a free-trade policy has failed?
The Bushites point proudly to 4.6 million jobs created since May 2003, a 4.7 percent unemployment rate and low inflation.
Unfortunately, conservative columnist Paul Craig Roberts and analysts Charles McMillion and Ed Rubenstein have taken a close look at the figures and discovered that the foundation of the Bush prosperity rests on rotten timber.
The entire job increase since 2001 has been in the service sector credit intermediation, health care, social assistance, waiters, waitresses, bartenders, etc. and state and local government.
But, from January 2001 to January 2006, the United States lost 2.9 million manufacturing jobs, 17 percent of all we had. Over the past five years, we have suffered a net loss in goods-producing jobs.
"The decline in some manufacturing sectors has more in common with a country undergoing saturation bombing than with a super-economy that is 'the envy of the world,'" writes Roberts.
Communications equipment lost 43 percent of its workforce. Semiconductors and electronic components lost 37 percent ... The workforce in computers and electronic products declined 30 percent. Electrical equipment and appliances lost 25 percent of its workforce.
How did this happen? Imports. The U.S. trade deficit in advanced technology jobs in 2005 hit an all-time high.
As for the "knowledge industry" jobs that were going to replace blue-collar jobs, it's not happening. The information sector lost 17 percent of all its jobs over the last five years.
In the same half-decade, the U.S. economy created only 70,000 net new jobs in architecture and engineering, while hundreds of thousands of American engineers remain unemployed.
If we go back to when Clinton left office, one finds that, in five years, the United States has created a net of only 1,054,000 private-sector jobs, while government added 1.1 million. But as many new private sector jobs are not full-time, McMillion reports, "the country ended 2005 with fewer private sector hours worked than it had in January 2001."
This is an economic triumph?
Had the United States not created the 1.4 million new jobs it did in health care since January 2001, we would have nearly half a million fewer private-sector jobs than when Bush first took the oath.
Ed Rubenstein of ESR Research Economic Consultants looks at the wage and employment figures and discovers why, though the Bushites were touting historic progress, 55 percent of the American people in a January poll rated the Bush economy only "fair" or "poor."
Not only was 2005's growth of 2 million jobs a gain of only 1.5 percent, anemic compared to the average 3.5 percent at this stage of other recoveries, the big jobs gains are going to immigrants.
Non-Hispanic whites, over 70 percent of the labor force, saw only a 1 percent employment increase in 2005. Hispanics, half of whom are foreign born, saw a 4.7 percent increase. As Hispanics will work for less in hospitals and hospices, and as waiters and waitresses, they are getting the new jobs.
But are not wages rising? Nope. When inflation is factored in, the Economic Policy Institute reports, "real wages fell by 0.5 percent over the last 12 months after falling 0.7 percent the previous 12 months."
If one looks at labor force participation what share of the 227 million potential workers in America have jobs it has fallen since 2002 for whites, blacks and Hispanics alike. Non-Hispanic whites are down to 63.4 percent, but black Americans have fallen to 57.7 percent.
What is going on? Hispanic immigrants are crowding out black Americans in the unskilled, semi-skilled and skilled job market. And millions of our better jobs are being lost to imports and outsourcing.
The affluent free-traders, whose wealth resides in stocks in global companies, are enriching themselves at the expense of their fellow citizens and sacrificing the American worker on the altar of the Global Economy.
None dare call it economic treason.
So you're referring to even the most minute parts, circuit boards. Just seal the US and not allow the free flow of goods?
I have a query about reconciling it with a conservative ideology.
Conservatives have always found a problem with the Courts understanding of the Commerce Clause, allowing the Government to interfere with interstate trade in the most minute detail.
How does a Conservative believe that the Government can tell a businessman with whom he can do business, from whom he can buy parts? Making such parts unnaturally expensive I count as interference.
Conservative values are, or should be all about Liberty. How do you find a legitimate excuse to the take away the freedom of business to go and do what is best for business?
When the messenger is a rabid dog...shoot it.
And as proof you offer our $12 trillion economy, (twice the size of our nearest competitor) growing at 4% a year with a low unemployment rate of just 4.7%, populated by 140 million workers with an all time high net worth of $51 trillion. Our rubes are getting rich while our far craftier counterparts, in the EU and Japan, are mired in deflation, moribund economic growth and high unemployment. No wonder they can't attract any investment capital. Hey, at least they have trade surpluses! LOL
Free trade, as it is called and practiced currently, is not free,
Is there more or less government interference in trade now than 50 years ago? 25 years ago?
Is the fact that free trade is not purely free mean we shouldn't pursue free(r) trade? If no, why not?
...which will become readily apparent once all of those "freely traded" dollars come back to purchase what is left of America and collect debts owed.
All that money flowing to us instead of Japan or the EU is a bad thing? Why is that? Growing a $12 trillion economy requires a great deal of investment. Where should it come from? Is a capital account surplus a good thing? If not, why not?
What do you mean by debts owed?
Your exaulted one is a broken fool...he keeps on playing the same tune...Bush is evil, Bush is evil.
Go Pat Go............get thee to the nearest lunatic asylum.
Zing. Plus, you didn't put a value on the beads.
So why is pat taking the side of Iran? Why does pat always lie about the WoT?
It's not. It's just a myth. The reality is that "maufacturing jobs" are the same jobs that everybody who did them for the last 200 years always complained about being sweaty, dirty, backbreaking work.
Several of them are. What is your point?
You believe in responsibility to the good of the State as compared to the individual's(business) right to economic liberty under threat of State action to enforce that collective responsibility?
Sounds like the Communists you disdain.
The WTO trumps our Constitution? How does a treaty trump our Constitution? Did Congress not vote on this treaty?
Yes, such particular situation could happen sometimes. But you are evading addressing the other more likely situation.
You can't compare the DUTCH EAST INDIA COMPANY buying Manhattan Islands ( which was NOT sold for the supposed $24 worth of beads, or trinkets, or any such a thing !) with Americans buying cheap Chinese products.
Of course, when domestic manufacturers produce the goods, we get the stuff and the money.
(Not an original observation on my part; I think it goes back to Abraham Lincoln.)
But thanks for at least engaging the argument, unlike all the name callers that preceded you.
Pat is right about alor of things. Conservatives are quick to praise him when they agree with him, and quick to dismiss him when they don't.
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