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P-38 Lightning
02-27-07, 17:15
Free Trade and Funny Math

By Patrick J. Buchanan*

To the devout libertarian, free trade is not a policy option to be debated, but a dogma to be defended. Nowhere is this more true than at that lamasery of libertarianism, the Cato Institute.

But with America running the worst trade deficits in history, the monks are having a hellish time of it. Hence, like the neocons who cherry-picked the intel to stovepipe to Scooter to bamboozle us into believing national survival hung on invading Iraq, they feed us irrelevant truths and deny us the whole truth.

Case in point—the Feb. 22 column in The Washington Times by one Daniel Ikenson, [Send him mail] "associate director at the Cato Institute's Center for Trade Policy Studies." Bewailing the "barrage of hyperbole and misinformation about trade and its relationship to jobs and economic growth," Ikenson assured us, with impressive statistics, that globalism is working out wonderfully well for America.

"(T)he Census Bureau data show that U.S. export growth was phenomenal in 2006, increasing by 14.5 percent. ... Exports to Europe increased by 15.2 percent and to China by nearly 32 percent. The growth in exports to Japan was a slower 7.5 percent, but it grew. Since 2001, U.S. exports have increased by more than 42 percent." [Tilting At Import Windmills]

Wow. Phenomenal indeed. And it does sound like we are cleaning those foreigners' clocks. But Ikenson ignored the other side of the ledger.

That the U.S. trade deficit in 2006 rose to an all-time record of $764 billion. That the deficit in goods hit $836 billion. That the deficit with China rose 15 percent, from $203 billion in 2005 to $233 billion in 2006, the largest trade deficit ever recorded between two nations. That the deficit with Japan rose to $88 billion, the largest ever between us.

Under Bush, the U.S. trade deficit has set five straight world records, as has the U.S. trade deficit in autos, parts and trucks. So reports Charles McMillion of MBG Services, who has for years tracked the decline and fall of American manufacturing.

For manufactured goods, our trade deficit rose to $536 billion, from $504 billion. In Bush's six years, America has run a total trade deficit of $2.6 trillion in manufactured goods, as 3 million U.S. manufacturing jobs have disappeared and wages in that sector have fallen 3 percent in three years.

Query to Ikenson: If these numbers represent a successful trade policy, what would a failed trade policy look like?

Recall NAFTA. In 1993, we had a trade surplus with Mexico. Some of us warned it would be gone with the wind if NAFTA passed. And NAFTA did pass, through the collaboration of Clinton Democrats with Gingrich Republicans, over the opposition of the American people.

Since 1994, we have run a trade deficit with Mexico every year. In 2006, it hit a record $60 billion. Grand total: almost $500 billion in trade deficits with Mexico since NAFTA. Mexico now exports more than 900,000 vehicles to the United States every year, while the United States exports fewer than 600,000 cars and trucks to the entire world.

This is success?

Where did Mexico get an auto industry? Is it good that our auto industry is being exported? Has the price of a new car plunged because Mexicans get paid a fraction of what U.S. autoworkers earn?

"In 2006, the U.S. economy grew by an additional 3.4 percent," writes Ikenson. True, and China's economy grew by 10 percent—and by 140 percent over the last 10 years, tripling the growth in the United States. Not only are we shipping factories, technology, equipment and jobs to China, we are exporting our future to China.

Nor should this shock any student of history. For contrary to free-trade mythology, every nation that has risen to pre-eminence and power—Britain before 1860, the United States from 1860-1914, Germany from 1870-1914, postwar Japan, China today—has pursued a mercantilist or protectionist trade policy.

Economic nationalism is the policy of rising powers, free trade the policy of declining powers. For great powers have ever regarded trade as an arena of struggle in the clash of nations. It is no accident all four presidents who made it to Mount Rushmore were protectionists.

"Thank God I am not a free trader," wrote Theodore Roosevelt. "Pernicious indulgence in the doctrine of free trade seems inevitably to produce fatty degeneration of the moral fibre."

Think Teddy might have had a point, Mr. Ikenson?

Probably not. For libertarianism is an ideology, and evidence that contradicts the dogma of an ideology is to be disregarded or denied. For the dogma cannot be wrong.

Indeed, should Ikenson awake from his dogmatic slumber and decide that free trade is failing America, he would not last long as associate director of the Cato Institute's Center for Trade Policy Studies. The folks who fund Cato are not paying to have dogma debated, but defended. For if the dogma be untrue, then the ideology, the whole system of beliefs, the faith itself, is called into question. And we can't have that.

edward gibbon
02-27-07, 17:39
Free Trade and Funny Math

By Patrick J. Buchanan...

That the U.S. trade deficit in 2006 rose to an all-time record of $764 billion. That the deficit in goods hit $836 billion. That the deficit with China rose 15 percent, from $203 billion in 2005 to $233 billion in 2006, the largest trade deficit ever recorded between two nations. That the deficit with Japan rose to $88 billion, the largest ever between us...

Nor should this shock any student of history. For contrary to free-trade mythology, every nation that has risen to pre-eminence and power—Britain before 1860, the United States from 1860-1914, Germany from 1870-1914, postwar Japan, China today—has pursued a mercantilist or protectionist trade policy. If the population of the US is now 300,000,000, the deficit in goods works out to $2400 per American citizen per year, or almost $7 per day. The sad part is that much of the manufactured goods cannot be duplicated in the US. More sadly we are not training the young to be tradesmen or skilled mechanics.

Somewhere after World War I the noted Indian nationalist and economist Mohandas Gandhi blasted free trade. He vowed the policy of permitting free access of the cotton mills of Lancastershire deprived his countrymen of a living.

Grapple
02-27-07, 18:07
Karl Marx was in favor of free trade not because he thought it was good but since he thought it would push revolution since it broke up nationalities and the social order.

But, in general, the protective system of our day is conservative, while the free trade system is destructive. It breaks up old nationalities and pushes the antagonism of the proletariat and the bourgeoisie to the extreme point. In a word, the free trade system hastens the social revolution. It is in this revolutionary sense alone, gentlemen, that I vote in favor of free trade.

Karl Marx on free trade (http://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1848/01/09ft.htm#marx)


On the other hand the financial people in the US do not push free trade because they want revolution its just simply economics, the big banks and financial houses get a piece of the action every time international trade occurs, it does not matter which way the money flows since they get their money both ways, so the more international trade the more money they make. So since they are the advisors to both the Republicans and Democrats they push free trade which will make them rich.

Happy Hacker
02-27-07, 20:51
"Where did Mexico get an auto industry? Is it good that our auto industry is being exported? Has the price of a new car plunged because Mexicans get paid a fraction of what U.S. autoworkers earn?"

Yes, the price of cars did plunge (from what it otherwise would have been). That's why GM and Ford are in trouble.

P-38 Lightning
02-27-07, 21:30
Economic nationalism is the policy of rising powers, free trade the policy of declining powers. For great powers have ever regarded trade as an arena of struggle in the clash of nations. It is no accident all four presidents who made it to Mount Rushmore were protectionists.
This is Pat in top form. I haven't read anything this poignant from a political writer since Sam Francis passed away.

Walter Yannis
02-28-07, 05:56
Here's a link on Cato Institute funding sources:

http://www.mediatransparency.org/recipientgrants.php?recipientID=51

It looks like a bunch of foundations of dead gazillionaires, but it would be interesting to see whether companies like Wal-Mart stand behind any of this.

Here's a Freeper thread on this article:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1791850/posts

These people really are the enemy.

P-38 Lightning
03-01-07, 00:54
Yes, these despicable characters are all over Free Republic, aren't they? Typical white Late Urban degenerates. The CATO Institute represents the Coke and Whores conservatives, who a recieve quite a generous amount of funding for their efforts against the God and Country conservatives.

Walter Yannis
03-01-07, 01:28
Yes, these despicable characters are all over Free Republic, aren't they? Typical white Late Urban degenerates. The CATO Institute represents the Coke and Whores conservatives, who a recieve quite a generous amount of funding for their efforts against the God and Country conservatives.

The typical Freeper employment profile seems to be lower middle class, wouldn't you say.

There are a lot of Jews, small small business owners, a few professionals, but mostly they seem to be skilled workers, lower level managers.

Maybe I'm wrong about that, what's your take?

If I'm right, it doesn't seem to me that Freepers do much to defend their own economic interest.

P-38 Lightning
03-01-07, 02:19
Walter Yannis- I'd say most of the more intellectual Freepers defend the economic interests they have pretentions of. The Jews, of course, are a different case altogether, but most of the wannabe corporate ladder-climber types think this is still the 1980s. They've filled their heads with nihilistic, materialistic garbage that passed itself off as right-wing conservative thought and they refuse to see the bigger picture. The more ignorant but better-intentioned working class jingoists, on the other hand, are often the sort of people who follow the first thing that passes for leadership. These are good folks, they have admirable fighting spirit, but most of the nationalistic types are unfortunately not that bright.

There are some good Freepers who don't have any of the problems I described, but they are in the minority and are probably out to convert poisoned minds.

Grapple
03-01-07, 06:57
These are good folks, they have admirable fighting spirit, but most of the nationalistic types are unfortunately not that bright.
Yep, or they would realize that their leadership would sell out the US in a heartbeat if it got them power or money. Also I would say they were not deep instead of not bright since they seem to only look at the shallow answers and if someone sticks enough American flags on a pig they would salute it.

P-38 Lightning
03-01-07, 13:10
Walter Yannis- Also, you have to remember how seductive, how much of a genius at psychological warfare a woman like Ayn Rand was and still is in her grave. Not all the Freepers are dumb, or Jewish, but a great deal of them seem to have had their minds snatched by the Lilith of the American Right.

Frank
03-03-07, 20:38
Can anyone recommend good mercantilist reading material or perhaps something that would explain how our system would function without the Federal Reserve? At the moment I’m admittedly fuzzy on the subject.

The US is large enough to benefit from a nice economy of scale. The 50 states share the same currency and do not distinguish between goods made among the states so “free trade” works within the US. There’s no need for trust so there is no tragedy of the commons as there is with trade with China.

We want to be ahead of the rest of the world so that it can’t threaten us. At the same time… we want to resist the temptation of using such power. The power exists as a deterrent only. What else should I know?

Walter Yannis
03-03-07, 21:11
Walter Yannis- Also, you have to remember how seductive, how much of a genius at psychological warfare a woman like Ayn Rand was and still is in her grave. Not all the Freepers are dumb, or Jewish, but a great deal of them seem to have had their minds snatched by the Lilith of the American Right.

I agree.

Back was I was in my late teens I became enamoured of her "philosophy."

But I grew out of it.

How could anybody beyond, say, the level of college sophomore take her seriously?

P-38 Lightning
03-03-07, 22:03
Some people consider Rand on the same level as Nietzsche and Spengler, which is sad but it confirms the disturbing prophesies of those two real philosophical legends (as does the outcome of the 20th Century Jewish intellectual love-hate relationship with them in general).

Factotum
03-04-07, 05:55
Can anyone recommend good mercantilist reading material or perhaps something that would explain how our system would function without the Federal Reserve?

A classic mercantilist work is Friedrich List's National System of Political Economy. Years ago, someone here posted an excellent review; I don't know whether it was saved.

Frank
03-04-07, 13:26
Amazon has several books by him. Thank you very much.

"a nation would act unwisely to endeavour to promote the welfare of the whole human race at the expense of its particular strength, welfare, and independence. It is a dictate of the law of self-preservation to make its particular advancement in power and strength the first principles of its policy".

Interestingly, Marx took a post at a liberal newspaper instead of him due to health issues.

Inside the wikipedia entry on List, the section "Disagreements with Adam Smith's ideas (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friedrich_List)" is very good.

Ugh, "Every nation, according to him, should begin with free trade, stimulating and improving its agriculture by intercourse with richer and more cultivated nations, importing foreign manufactures and exporting raw products. When it is economically so far advanced that it can manufacture for itself, then a system of protection should be employed to allow the home industries to develop themselves fully, and save them from being overpowered in their earlier efforts by the competition of more matured foreign industries in the home market. When the national industries have grown strong enough no longer to dread this competition, then the highest stage of progress has been reached; free trade should again become the rule, and the nation be thus thoroughly incorporated with the universal industrial union."