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So, President
Obama thinks that anyone who questions the opaque Trans-Pacific Partnership is in
effect arguing for perpetuating the “status quo.” (See today’s Washington Post: http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/obama-says-he-willing-to-defy-democrats-on-his-support-of-trans-pacific-partnership/2014/12/03/25edcaf4-7b30-11e4-84d4-7c896b90abdc_story.html?wpisrc=nl-headlines&wpmm=1.) A while back, he charged critics
of the TPP and its baby sister the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment
Partnership with complaining about issues that in his judgment had been settled
twenty-five years ago. Huh?
Projection is a common psychological
defense mechanism: attribute to
others what you want to deny about yourself. In this case, the administration and its big business allies
are the ones who are perpetuating the status quo. The special interests for which trade agreements are
designed to work often benefit from their intricately crafted provisions. However, those provisions have little to do with
either “free trade” or the national interest.
Whereas Adam Smith argued that a
nation as a whole (hence The Wealth of
Nations) would be better off by
ending perpetually unbalanced trade – the essence of mercantilism. He surely would see through the
unexamined assumption of modern day “free traders” who argue in effect that
anything that leaves them better off serves the national interest.
Yet this blind spot is not
peculiar to the current administration. For decades the United States has failed to:
- Counteract the spread of mercantilist practices that now distort 40 percent of the world economy, creating immense imbalances that threaten the continuation of the post-World War II economic system;
- Address the growing discrepancy between the US and foreign tax regimes, handing to more than 150 countries a built-in two-way advantage in trade with this country;
- Neutralize the rise of state-owned enterprises in international trade and finance, allowing those who have virtual immunity from market forces to gain a huge competitive advantage over our companies and our workers;
- Offset the massive subsidies paid to induce American firms to offshore their headquarters, research facilities, production facilities, and components suppliers; and
- Develop a coherent energy policy that capitalizes on home-grown supply and technology, leaving us dependent on foreign supply, complicating our national security calculations, and inexorably adding to our foreign debt.
For a generation, those issues
have been ignored by our trade negotiators and our economic policymakers. While successive administrations have
hyped the benefits from China’s accession to the World Trade Organization and
our “free trade” agreements with 26 other countries, here’s what’s been
happening to the US economy:
- Trade deficits continue at historically high levels. Since our last annual surplus in 1975, we have incurred an unbroken string of 39 consecutive deficits totaling about $10 trillion dollars. Seventy percent of that has occurred in just the past 13 years, just when expanded trade was supposed to be improving our trade performance and living standards!
- Median household incomes have been falling as American workers have lost well paying jobs and benefits to foreign competitors. Despite impressive productivity gains, the typical American worker is worse off today both in wage earnings and benefits.
- Median household net worth has also suffered as falling incomes and rising cost of housing, medical care and education have curtailed the average family’s ability to save and invest. Today half of American households have accumulated over their lifetimes a net worth of $81,000 or less – smaller than the annual bonus of some law associates or rookies at Wall Street financial companies.
- Foreign debt, largely driven by the cumulation of annual trade deficits, has risen year by year to almost $17 trillion – about one year’s output for the entire American economy.
Each dollar of foreign debt is a
claim on what Americans own or can squeeze out of our shrunken production base.
When the inevitable day of
reckoning arrives, inflation will make up for any shortfall in available assets,
goods and services. Literally, our
perennial trade deficits are not only a drain on our economy at present but
also a threat to our prosperity, sovereignty and way of life in the future.
So, the status quo is
the problem, but more of the same sort of trade agreements cannot be the
solution. We need a government
able and willing to confront the problems that have burdened us for a long
time. The good news is that most
of them can be addressed effectively and legally by actions within our
control. Then – and only then –
broad regional trade agreements might make a lot more sense and might enjoy a
lot more political support than they do now. Instead of complaining about critics, those in power would
be better advised to act in a determined, comprehensive way on the perennial
problems that have gutted the prospects for prosperity for half the nation.
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