Economic Sophisms Revisited
by
Sean Corrigan
by Sean Corrigan
Once
again, an article on matters of trade,
one which merely rehearses the sound thinking of the classic liberal
tradition of Say, Bastiat, Cobden, and Bright – as well as that
of the Austrians, of course – and illuminates it with a few modern
examples, has set off a barrage of largely polite, but nonetheless
impassioned attempts at refutation.
With
due respect to my correspondents, Lew himself chuckled at the replies
I copied him, remarking drolly that, hard though it was to believe,
it seemed there were "more Trade cranks than Monetary ones out there"!
What
is indisputable is that there is something shamanistic in a border,
that mere coloured line on a map which marks the need to render
one’s exactions to one parasitical ruling apparatus in place of
another, or to exchange one overissued paper portrait of an overlord
for one bearing a different mugshot, which acts so effectively to
befuddle the critical faculties of otherwise sensible men and women!
As
an example, the article reignited a previous exchange with one worthy,
who seems to think that selling new products still offered in
low volumes and thus at high prices to a walled-off "high wage"
populace, is the only way to ensure that technological innovation
translates into material progress.
What
this "infant industry" argument – the resort of all sorts of rent-seeking
scoundrels and blind chauvinists throughout history misses, among
its many other failings, is that the forced inability to acquire
little other than a limited range of home-produced, highly-priced
goods means the supposedly "high wages" are little more than an
example of "money illusion" another instance of the all-too prevalent
confusion of money with wealth which so plagues economic understanding
everywhere.
Below
is a sustained extract from this debate, which encapsulates many
of the arguments rehearsed by those who think the Chinese are out
to steal our jobs and that our ever-benevolent State should "do
something" about it.
One
thing you fail to mention is that in a free trade zone, all
factors of production will tend to go to the same level. Just
between India and China, you have about 300 M. people working
for subsistence wages. Before the rest of the world can really
improve its standard of living, we must first level off the
wages in the free trade world. This will mean that wages will
tend to go down in the developed countries while wages will
rise slightly in the under developed countries. In the developed
countries, the lower prices will not off set the loss of wages. But
my argument is that this last is precisely what will
happen if we are to obtain an equilibrium under free market conditions. In
the US, free trade is resulting in the concentration of wealth
in the top few percent of the people. In 1975, the top 1% controlled
about 25% of the wealth. Today they control 45% of the total
wealth and it continues to increase. If this trend towards concentration
of wealth continues, we will have a situation which approaches
the division of wealth last seen in the Middle Ages. Agreed:
paper money, government interventionism, and corporate cronyism
(largely to the benefit of the financiers) are destroying the middle
class bedrock of the free commonwealth as has been its fate in
most empires in history but that's hardly the fault of "free"
trade, since we don't ever practice it. While
much has been made of the growth of the US economy under the
"free trade" policies of the last 30 years, in truth, it has
been the worst 30-year period in our economic history. Our economy
grew faster in the 30-year period that ended at the depth of
the Great Depression.
"Growth"
is a difficult subject to deal with in one or two lines, but it
would be better to say our Casino economy – with a pawn shop next
to every craps table – has, especially in the past 20 years, replaced
the Machine Shop economy – which had a savings bank on every corner
of Main Street - but, again, "free" markets are hardly to blame
for the swelling State, the incontinent Fed, and the vulturine lawyers.
In
the 70's, the largest single employer in the US, General Motors,
paid wages well above average. Today, the largest single employer
in the US, Wal-Mart, pays wages, which are lower in real terms,
than the minimum wage of the 70's. And,
in the process, GM and the rest of Motown effectively destroyed
themselves. Today they still struggle with the legacy of policies
which padded the lot of their unionized employees right up to their
final resting place, at the expense of their customers and hence
their owners.
Whose
fault was that not those who promote "free trade", surely?
As
for Wal-Mart, I know only that this firm is so demonized in the
popular press that I am suspicious it might not be such
an unmitigated evil after all!
I
do know that it provides lower-income urban consumers
with a range and a quality of goods at prices to which they could
previously not have expected to have access.
True,
Mom'n'Pop can't now hope to earn their own basket
of goods by running a well-meaning, but economically inefficient,
corner store; but, then, Pop's granddad probably hated it when Nikola
Tesla and Thomas Edison made him quit the gas lighting business,
too.
Perhaps
you could explain to your readers how wages will not equalize
in the free trade world. And don't say that the developed world
will continue to command high wages because of their higher
productivity, because the productivity is just as high, if not
higher, in the modern facilities in the under developed countries.
Two
points: firstly, it's very unlikely that ALL the 300 million
Indians and Chinese will become as productive as we Westerners since
there will not be enough of the required capital with which to furnish
them (real capital – produced factors of production
is meant here, not just bank loans) for some considerable
time possibly forever, if we insist on consuming it at the
rate we do! To say otherwise is to argue a Land of Milk and Honey
scenario.
Conversely,
why should any equalization necessarily be such a bad thing? The
international division of labour would be heightened, more brainpower
and more entrepreneurialism would be unleashed: if this were to
occur it is hardly something which would inevitably redound to ourdetriment.
Besides,
while it is true our real wages would decline relatively
(unless we scramble rapidly up the added-value chain), this harnessing
of such a vast and untapped resource of would-be producers
people who will, of course, also act in turn as a vast new consumer
market for goods and services, both theirs and ours could
mean that there is not only no absolute decline, but,
in fact, an absolute rise, in overall wealth.
If
you doubt this, tell me why the immigration into the virgin territories
of North America and that land's subsequent industrialization in
the 19th century was such a generalized boon, then, but why the
modernization and increased freedom being granted the masses of
China and India today supposedly is not?
After
all, the first, while geographically separated, was a process of
giving the (economically) backward poor of Europe the tools, the
property and the incentives to profit by their use and so was directly
analogous to what is happening in a still all-too limited
fashion to the masses in China and India (minus the ocean
passage) today.
No,
sir, free trade should it ever be allowed by envious socialists,
or by self-serving economic royalists and their illiterate political
stooges would greatly advance the cause of us all.
What
a shame we are more likely to end up with protectionism, resource
conflicts, autarky and war instead
My
next correspondent rightly bemoaned the hounding unto destruction
of the honest bourgeois – always a sign of a senescent Empire
and then gave me a Buchananite bromide against free tradesupported
"sweatshops".
I
read your column in with much interest. But I must say that you
had no words about the foreign and, I know, American
"sweatshops."
Just
as Ross Perot predicted, there has been a giant swishing sound
of manufacturers moving to Mexico and other foreign countries.
As a result of this… these corporations have left and continue
to leave an enormous gap in American jobs the middle class
is disappearing!
How
can anyone expect a family to do other than to just exist
on a pay check from McDonalds, Wal-Mart, etc.
How
can you consider that the jobs that have been moved to other countries,
with barely-subsistent wages, horrible working conditions, even
children working at these places that are owned by persons or
corporations that are consumed by greed, are somehow great!
The
great majority of the American public are enraged. These disenchanted
persons should not be taken lightly. They are capable of rebellion!
When
parents of children and elderly parents continue to see their
families, neighbours, and friends abused, yes abused, in this
fashion, you can see the seeds of indignation and rebellion.
These
feelings should not be taken lightly. There is a great anger rising
out here in the heartland as "W" calls us. Somebody needs to do
something for these people!
I
replied as follows: I
agree the Middle Class is sadly being destroyed but not by
China!
Rather
this has been brought about through the insidious moral corruption
– with its associated and widespread financial distortions
which has replaced our grandparents' thrift and hard work with
today's credit-backed, "I want it NOW", consumer society
China
and Mexico would have no-one to sell to without taking a due
proportion of our exports in return if US (and other Western
citizens) were not happy to buy everything on the never-never
and THEY would be unable to give into such an understandable
temptation if we had honest money (thus limiting the supply
of credit to what was voluntarily saved) and if we did not foster
the illusion that we are "wealthier" because of the false equation
of higher (monetary) stock and home prices with genuine prosperity
and economic well-being.
As
for "sweatshops", that is a WHOLE other issue, but, briefly,
please recognise that workers can never be paid more than the
marginal value of the product to which they contribute, just
as surely as you cannot pay to burn more coal, or to use up
more scrap iron, in making a car than it will ultimately realise
in the showroom!
In
the end, the real answer to the distress and disquiet to which
you allude and which I agree has very real roots is not
to increase minimum wages, to adopt protective measures, to
lower interest rates, to have government spend more, or to employ
any of the other harmful socialistic methods of intervention
which have led them to their present pass, but rather to educate
the people that their woes lie at the heart of the political,
legal, monetary, and ethical degeneration into which they have
been led over the past 70 years or so of paper money and oligarchy,
as America has been turned from a quasi-republic to a new Rome.
To
the extent my article has provoked a debate on these issues,
I feel happy that I have made some minuscule contribution to
that vital cause.
Yet
another previous protagonist took up the cudgels once more, twitting
me this time on my contentions about how the recent expansion of
the EU would pan out for the more highly-paid (and, sadly, the social
welfarestupefied) Germans and their ilk.
In
this, I had argued that the former customers of those Germans made
redundant by their Eastern neighbours would now spend less on what
was formerly made in the Heimat and so would have more free income
at their disposal to devote to other things.
Since,
the logic ran, the newly-hired Polish and Czech factory workers
would also enjoy better wages than in the past, these
two unspent sources of income would quickly provide a market opportunity
for those displaced to find a new livelihood by offering
different and novel goods and services to the owners of such monies.
I
had thought this chain of reasoning – hardly a novel one – would
be fairly uncontroversial, but I was wrong: the Yellow Peril intruded
again… Do
I understand you correctly, I was asked, in that you expect
the displaced factory workers in Heimat to "find a new livelihood
offering different and novel goods and services?"
If
so, then please explain how this would be accomplished if, instead
of outsourcing to the Poles and Czechs, the outsourcing would
have been to the Chinese, who, with their vast numbers of potential
factory workers, will probably maintain extremely low labour
costs for decades to come. So,
like Don Quixote, tilting at these windmills of the mind, I tried
again:
What's
the difference whether they're Czech or Chinese?
Might
they not want German beer; German banking; German insurance; German
shipping; German warehousing and distribution; German architects
to design their new homes; German engineers to build them cars;
German capital goods to equip their factories; German tools to
maintain them; German ad-men to sell their wares; German music
to listen to; German fashions to wear; German novels to read (God
help them on these three!); might they not want to visit German
spas in their leisure time, flying on a German airline to get
there, etc., etc., etc. ...
Moreover,
the Chinese cannot replicate everything more cheaply
and more efficiently than the Europeans and even if they
could they would inevitably exceed less far in some things
than in others.
Thus,
the Germans could then offer to perform these tasks
(where the new inferiority is the lesser) instead, so that the
Chinese might specialize further by concentrating on what it is
they exceed most at (a process long known to economists as "comparative
advantage").
Nobody
said this is going to be easy: but life in a free republic is
not guaranteed to be easy, Sir, merely free.
Thankfully,
however, opportunities for enterprise are never
exhausted and a people who once rebuilt so marvellously after
the devastation of WWII will surely rediscover their skills amid
adversity.
Perhaps
the Chinese and Czechs will even accelerate the change, assisting
the Germans (and others of us) by collapsing the cloying welfare
state socialism in which they and we have submerged our undoubted
abilities for far too long.
Of
all the mails I did receive, perhaps the least courteous and perhaps
also the one displaying the most deranged thought processes on this
vexed issue – emanated from what, back in the days when there still
remained a distinction between a high-class Madame and a street
corner pimp, used to be called a "White Shoe" investment bank.
I’m
afraid I was tempted into a show of scorn myself in reply to this
gentleman, who was, sadly yet another Listian Sinophobe: Sir,
In
your attack on my article, you wrote of "a government-funded
crusade against small business and labour that is being desperately
fought with protectionism...".
Run
this by me again?
Do
you mean that one arm of government is actively
trying to destroy small business and labour (which must be a
real bummer at the hustings) while, at the same time, another
arm of government is heroically defending the free market using
protectionism?
Misesians
will hardly be surprised that the failed attempt at Collectivist
intervention can only call forth more such harmful meddling,
but this idea of its energetic simultaneity seems to imply that
the State must now find itself in an advanced state of psychosis,
indeed!
I
also like the idea that we can save the free market by erecting
tariff barriers: a similar kind of logic perhaps to the Neo-Con
faith that applying the Yankee Cavalry doctrine of the "only
good Injun is a dead one" might actually work in persuading
the inhabitants of Fallujah that ours really is
the only path to peace and freedom. But,
hearteningly, my mail box was not all gloom and doom, nor was it
exclusively a sincere, but nonetheless misguided, rehearsal of the
fallacies of the Malthusians and Mercantilists.
One
fine lady saw the positive gleam of gold amid the dross of populist
rhetoric.
She
wrote: Can
all the outsourcing that's going on around the world right now
eventually end the socialist mind-set of our governments, given
that they would not dare, having the Russian example to learn
from, entirely to eliminate the markets?
Can
businesses so circumvent the governments that they, the governments,
will eventually have to leave them alone or suffer the consequences
of being thrown out of office? I
wrote back:
That
IS a cheery thought! But America's own rhetoric on this (to be
followed by action after November?) does not bode well for it
to come about.
Unfortunately,
it does also rather beg the question of the whole problem of "corporate
welfare" (if we are being euphemistic) or "economic
fascism" (if we are not and we adopt the plain words of Ron
Paul) whereby many of these established companies only
thrive thanks to their complex symbiosis with the armed State,
needing its reciprocated assistance to help them go about their
business with as little genuine competition from other, newer,
entrepreneurs as possible.
However,
it is undeniable that the more dispersed the means of production
are, the less control any one polity can exert.
If
socialism leads to autarky leads to war, then perhaps outsourcing
leads to mutual interdependence leads to international amity.
For
that reason alone, we should seek to embrace it, not succumb to
the weasel words of the threatened interest groups who would have
us eschew it.
That
might be as good a place as any to let the matter rest for now.
After all, my inbox is cluttered enough as it is and it was so
hard to scrub off all that green ink the last time…
May
7, 2004
Sean
Corrigan [send him mail]
writes from London.

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