How
'Sweatshops' Help the Poor
by
Thomas J. DiLorenzo
by Thomas J. DiLorenzo
DIGG THIS
One of the
oldest myths about capitalism is the notion that factories that
offer the poor higher wages to lure them off the streets (and away
from lives of begging, stealing, prostitution, or worse) or away
from back-breaking farm labor somehow impoverishes and exploits
them. They are said to work in "sweatshops" for "subsistence
wages." That was the claim made by socialists and unionists
in the early days of the industrial revolution, and it is still
made today by the same category of malcontents – usually by people
who have never themselves performed manual labor and experienced
breaking a sweat while working. (I am not referring here to the
red herring claim that most foreign "sweatshops" utilize
some kind of slave labor. This is an outrageous propaganda ploy
designed to portray defenders of free markets as being in favor
of slavery).
The self-interest
of labor unions in this anti-capitalist crusade has always been
transparent: Unions cannot exist without somehow prohibiting competition
from non-union labor, whether that labor is at home or abroad. Thus,
they wage campaigns of propaganda, intimidation, or violence against
non-union workers, whether they are in Indiana or Indonesia. They
are not in the least concerned about the well-being of the Third
World poor. If the labor unions have their way, the poor whose lives
are improved by their employment by multinational corporations would
all be thrown out of work, many of whom would be forced to resort
to crime, prostitution, or starvation. That is the "moral
high ground" that has been staked out on college campuses all
over America where unions have been successful in instigating "anti-sweatshop"
campaigns, seminars, and protests.
That the anti-factory
movement has always been motivated by either the socialists’ desire
to destroy industrial civilization, or by the inherently non-competitive
nature of organized labor, is further evidenced by the fact that
there was never an "anti-sweat-farm movement." Farm labor
is still as rigorous as any physical labor, as it was 150 years
ago. Indeed, in the early days of the industrial revolution – and
in Third World countries today – one reason why families had so
many more children than they do in wealthier countries today is
that they were viewed as potential farm hands. Abraham Lincoln had
less than one year of formal education because his parents, like
most others on the early nineteenth-century American frontier, needed
him as a farm hand. But since agriculture was not considered to
be a form of capitalism, and did not pose any real threat to unionized
labor, there was never any significant social protest over it.
In a forthcoming
article in the Journal of Labor Research Ben Powell and David
Skarbek present the results of a survey of "sweatshops"
in eleven Third World countries. In nine of the eleven countries,
"sweatshop" wages in foreign factories located there were
higher than the average. In Honduras, where almost half the working
population lives on $2/day, "sweatshops" pay $13.10/day.
"Sweatshop" wages are more than double the national average
in Cambodia, Haiti, Nicaragua, and Honduras. The implication of
this for all those naïve college students (and faculty) who
have been duped into becoming anti-sweatshop protesters is that
they should support and encourage more direct foreign investment
in the Third World if they are at all concerned about the economic
wellbeing of the people there.
It is never
the workers in countries like Honduras who protest the existence
of a new factory there built by a Nike or a General Motors. The
people there benefit as consumers as well as workers, since there
are more (and cheaper) consumer goods manufactured and sold in their
country (as well as in other parts of the world). Capital investment
of this sort is infinitely superior to the alternative – foreign
aid – which always empowers the governmental recipients of the "aid,"
making things even worse for the private economies of "aid"
recipients. Market-based capital investment is always far superior
to politicized capital allocation. Moreover, if the foreign investment
fails, the economic burden falls on the investors and stockholders,
not the poor Third World country.
During the
socialist calculation debate of the early twentieth century, one
of the responses that Ludwig von Mises made to the "market
socialists" was that it could never be sufficient to simply
read the Wall Street Journal and use the prices for inputs
and other goods as revealed in the capitalist countries in order
to make socialism work, as they contended. As important as private
property and market-driven prices are to capitalism, another necessary
ingredient for capitalist success is a culture of entrepreneurship,
management, risk taking, marketing, financial know-how, and other
skills that have developed over several hundred years in the capitalist
countries. Without this, the market socialists could only play at
pretend-capitalism.
Another virtue
of foreign investment in the Third World is that it has the potential
of transferring such knowledge to countries where it previously
did not exist – or at least was not very prevalent. It is not only
technology that the poor countries need, but the culture of capitalism.
Without it they will never dig their way out of poverty.
The existence
of foreign factories in poor countries also creates what economists
call "agglomeration economies." The location of a factory
will cause many businesses of all types to sprout all around the
factory to serve the factory itself as well as all of the employees.
Thus, it is not just the factory jobs that are created. Furthermore,
a successful investment in a poor country will send a signal to
other potential investors that there is a stable environment for
investment there, which can lead to even more investment, job creation
and prosperity.
Capital investment
in poor countries will cause wages to rise over time by increasing
the marginal productivity of labor. This is what has occurred since
the dawn of the industrial revolution and it is occurring today
all around the world. Discouraging such investment, which is the
objective of the anti-sweatshop movement, will do the opposite and
cause wages to stagnate.
Finally,
perhaps one of the strongest virtues of foreign "sweatshops"
is that they weaken the hand of American labor unions. With few
exceptions, American unions have long been at the forefront of anti-capitalist
ideology and have supported virtually all the destructive tax and
regulatory policies that have been so poisonous to American capitalism.
Unions believe that they cannot exist unless workers can be convinced
that employers are the enemies of the working class, if not society,
and that they (the workers) need unions to protect them from these
exploiters.
If
you want to support the Third World poor, purchase more of
the products that they labor to make in the capitalist enterprises
that have located there.
November
9, 2006
Thomas
J. DiLorenzo [send him mail]
professor of economics at Loyola College in Maryland and the
author of The
Real Lincoln: A New Look at Abraham Lincoln, His Agenda, and an
Unnecessary War,
(Three Rivers Press/Random House). His
latest book is Lincoln
Unmasked: What You’re Not Supposed To Know about Dishonest Abe
(Crown Forum/Random House).
Copyright
© 2006 LewRockwell.com
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