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Demeter

(85,373 posts)
50. The New Economics of Trade: Factories on Barges and the Race to the Bottom
Wed Jan 30, 2013, 03:16 PM
Jan 2013
http://www.alternet.org/story/64055/the_new_economics_of_trade%3A_factories_on_barges_and_the_race_to_the_bottom

Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric, captured the new rules of the global economy when he talked of ideally having "every plant you own on a barge."
October 1, 2007 |





The classical theory of comparative advantage has driven US trade policy for the past fifty years. That policy, in combination with technical innovations that have lowered costs of transportation and communication, has opened the global economy. Yet paradoxically, this opening has rendered classical trade theory obsolete. That in turn has left the US economically vulnerable because its trade policy remains stuck in the past and based on ideas that no longer hold. The logic behind classical free trade is that all can benefit when countries specialize in producing those things in which they have comparative advantage. The necessary requirement is that the means of production (capital and technology) are internationally immobile and stuck in each country. That is what globalization has undone.

Several years ago Jack Welch, former CEO of General Electric, captured the new reality when he talked of ideally having "every plant you own on a barge." The economic logic was that factories should float between countries to take advantage of lowest costs, be they due to under-valued exchange rates, low taxes, subsidies, or a surfeit of cheap labor. Globalization has made Welch's barge a reality. However, in doing so it has made capital mobility rather than country comparative advantage the engine of trade. And with that change, "free trade" increasingly trades jobs and promotes downward wage equalization.

The U.S. and European response to Welch's barge has been competitiveness policy that advocates measures such as increased education spending to improve skills; lower corporate tax rates; and investment and R&D incentives. The thinking is increased competitiveness can make Europe and the US more attractive to businesses. Unfortunately, competitiveness policy is not up to the task of anchoring the barge, and it can even be counter-productive. The core problem is corporations are globally mobile. Thus, government can subsidize R&D spending, but the resulting innovations may simply end up in new offshore factories. Moreover, competitiveness policy easily degenerates into a race to the bottom. For instance, if the US cuts corporation taxes, other countries may match to stay competitive. The result is no gain for the US, while profit taxes are lowered and tax burdens shifted on to wages, which widens income inequality. Worse yet, capital mobility prompts countries to adopt unfair policies to increase their relative business attractiveness. These policies include disregard of environmental damage; suppression of labor to keep wages low; direct subsidies; and under-valued exchange rates. All are visible in China, which is the poster-child for such abuses.

A critical consequence of Welch's barge is the creation of a "corporation versus country" divide. Previously, when corporations were nationally based, profit maximization by business contributed to national economic success by ensuring efficient resource use. Today, corporations still maximize profits, but they do so from the standpoint of their global operations. Consequently, what is good for corporations may not be good for country....From an American worker perspective, the global economy has always had abundant supplies of cheap labor. In the past American workers were still able to compete and benefit from trade. The critical difference today is American corporations are taking their capital and technology offshore and equipping low-wage foreign workers. Those investments undermine American workers because that foreign production is intended for the US market...

THE INJUSTICE IS THAT THE CAPITAL CORPORATIONS EXPORT WAS PRODUCED (AND STOLEN) FROM AMERICAN WORKERS, USING MAINLY US NATIONAL RESOURCES AND INFRASTRUCTURE. IT'S NOT THEIRS TO EXPORT, IN OTHER WORDS, YET THE CORPORATIONS HAVE BOUGHT THE GOVERNMENT TO ENABLE THAT THEFT....

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Thomas Palley is the founder of the Economics for Democratic & Open Societies Project. Read more of his work at www.thomaspalley.com.
Thanks for the 'toon to Playinghardball Tansy_Gold Jan 2013 #1
Note the the readers: a Living Wage is at least $20/ Hr Demeter Jan 2013 #2
No debt is a really big deal. It's why buying that house Warpy Jan 2013 #3
Debt free is the only way I can make it Tansy_Gold Jan 2013 #4
I was lucky, my parents were Depression teenagers Warpy Jan 2013 #5
Debt free too DemReadingDU Jan 2013 #6
I moved to a cheap area Warpy Jan 2013 #7
ITA.... AnneD Jan 2013 #44
"Just because you're paranoid..." Demeter Jan 2013 #8
Jupiter ends 4 months of retrograde Demeter Jan 2013 #9
In that Dilbert, the company lawyer has a knife. tclambert Jan 2013 #21
That film is more real than most people can imagine. Fuddnik Jan 2013 #45
The real euro crisis is just starting: Unemployment is near society’s breaking point Demeter Jan 2013 #10
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HEIGH-HO, HEIGH-HO Demeter Jan 2013 #24
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STORMY WEATHER Demeter Jan 2013 #26
clifton chenier -- louisiana blues xchrom Jan 2013 #27
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Well, Either Roll the Payroll Taxes into the General Income Tax, or Remove the Cap Demeter Jan 2013 #38
oh i wanna see the cap removed. xchrom Jan 2013 #40
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Stocks Up, Economy Down Demeter Jan 2013 #49
The New Economics of Trade: Factories on Barges and the Race to the Bottom Demeter Jan 2013 #50
Now I see why gas jumped $.15 a gallon overnight. Fuddnik Jan 2013 #51
I could not give a more enthusiastic rec than the one for this post. amandabeech Jan 2013 #52
You are so right (n/t) bread_and_roses Jan 2013 #53
Multitudinous cheers for Tansy Gold! amandabeech Jan 2013 #54
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