Obama and global trade
By Paul Craig Roberts
Online Journal Guest Writer
Feb 25, 2008, 00:48
Unique among the contenders for the presidential
nominations, Barack Obama has raised the issue of US job loss from US
corporations moving operations abroad in order to lower their labor costs and,
thereby, boost profits. As reported by the Financial Times, Obama
proposed a lower tax rate for US companies that maintain or increase their US
workforce relative to their overseas workforce. [Obama
seeks Ohio’s blue-collar vote by Edward Luce, February 19, 2008]
Economists, who have crawled out on a limb in defense of
offshoring jobs, quickly denounced Obama's plan. As the US economy continues to
lose relative ground, economists hold more tightly to their misconception that
a country benefits by moving high value-added, high income jobs abroad and
replacing them at home with low value-added, low income jobs. This view, which
places the rights of capital far above the rights of labor and the duties of
citizenship, is economically nonsensical as well. Whatever the defects of
Obama's plan, it shows more serious thought than can be found among Washington
policymakers and the economics profession.
Obama's concern is shared by Ralph Gomory, one of
America's most distinguished mathematicians and co-author with William Baumol, past
president of the American Economics Association, of the most important book on
trade theory in 200
years, Global
Trade and Conflicting National Interests.
Gomory has pointed out that corporations
break the link between their interests and America's interest when they
offshore their production for US markets. By producing abroad, they raise
foreign GDP and lower US GDP. By producing abroad, they raise the productivity
of foreign labor and lower the productivity of US labor. By producing abroad,
they increase the productivity capabilities and trade position of other countries
at America's expense.
What can be done? Gomory suggests that one solution would be
to replace the US corporate income tax with a tax based on the value-added of a
corporation's US employees. The higher the value-added of a corporation's US
work force compared to its industry, the lower the tax rate. Such a tax system
would encourage corporations to keep high productivity, high-value added jobs
in the US and to increase them.
The aim would be to set the tax to counteract the advantage
to the corporations of producing with less expensive labor abroad. Large
underutilized labor forces in China and India permit US corporations to hire
abundant labor at wages substantially less than the workers' contributions to
profits, resulting in a shift of high value-added jobs abroad. Gomory's scheme
would provide an incentive for corporations to increase the value-added
component from the US workforce instead of capitalizing on cheap foreign labor.
Gomory's idea deserves thought. In the meantime, we are
faced with pressures from a massive trade deficit that cannot be closed as long
as US corporations are moving their production offshore. Offshored products for
US markets reenter the US as imports, thus widening the trade deficit, already
a world record. The continual widening of the trade deficit will eventually
erode away the dollar's value and its role as world reserve currency. Currently
we are covering our trade deficit by giving up the ownership of our existing
assets.
Another smart man, Warren Buffett, has
proposed a way to bring US trade into balance. Exporters would be awarded import
certificates in the dollar value of their exports. The certificates would
be sold in a market to importers, who could import goods in the dollar amount
of the certificates. This way imports cannot exceed exports. Moreover, as the
certificates would be profit to exporters, it encourages more exports. Free
trade theory never intended for economies to be in permanent trade
disequilibrium. The US experience of a worsening disequilibrium over a quarter
century is outside the bounds of trade theory.
The US has serious economic problems and cannot afford to
continue to pile up debts and to sell off its assets to pay its bills. David
Walker, head of the US Government Accountability Office, has put the unfunded
liabilities of the US government (principally Social Security and Medicare
benefits) at between $50 and $60 trillion. Official statistics show no
growth in real median family incomes in many years. The dollar's value has
declined dramatically in relation to other traded currencies. The United States
simply cannot afford to stand by blindly while its corporations shift US GDP
growth to China, India, and elsewhere abroad.
The unfunded liabilities of the US government amount to
$500,000 per American household. As no more than 1 or 2 percent of American
households can come up with this kind of cash, the US government is essentially
bankrupt. The bankruptcy will worsen as offshoring moves more US GDP abroad
while simultaneously raising the trade deficit and indebtedness of the country.
American hubris produces gigantic delusion not only among
the people and the politicians but also among the economists. President Obama
and his Secretary of the Treasury, Ralph Gomery, are our last best hopes.
Paul
Craig Roberts [email him] was
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury during President Reagan’s first term. He
was Associate Editor of the Wall Street Journal. He has held numerous academic
appointments, including the William E. Simon Chair, Center for Strategic
and International Studies, Georgetown University, and Senior Research Fellow,
Hoover Institution, Stanford University. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by
French President Francois Mitterrand. He is the author of Supply-Side
Revolution : An Insider's Account of Policymaking in Washington; Alienation
and the Soviet Economy and Meltdown:
Inside the Soviet Economy, and is the co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton
of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions : How Prosecutors and Bureaucrats Are Trampling the
Constitution in the Name of Justice. Click here for Peter
Brimelow’s Forbes Magazine interview with Roberts about the recent epidemic of
prosecutorial misconduct.
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