Gulf News

Free trade pacts do the US no favours

What they end up doing is further eroding America’s manufactur­ing base

- By Charles R. Morris

Free trade is an American mantra. The Obama administra­tion’s commitment to winning “fasttrack” status for its cherished Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade agreement is part of that tradition. But growing evidence shows that granting full trading privileges to lowincome countries on the make is usually costly to the US.

The US has been in lengthy negotiatio­ns with 11 nations around the Pacific Rim, including Australia, Chile, Japan, Singapore and Malaysia. After years of talks, the partners now seem close to an agreement.

That is one reason for the unusual congressio­nal alliance of left-wing Democrats like Senator Elizabeth Warren with Tea Party Republican­s like Representa­tive Walter Jones lined up against the trade initiative. Policy-wonk Tea Party fellow travellers, including Representa­tive Paul Ryan and Senator Ted Cruz, support the deal — as do many mainstream economists.

Economists cite the great advantage of free trade as a basic doctrine of classical economics. If trading partners concentrat­e on what they do best, the argument goes, both partners end up better off. The US debunked that theory in the 19th century.

It sold commoditie­s like iron and cotton to Europe while building high tariff walls to protect its own “infant industries”. By the 1890s, the US had surpassed Britain in most advanced industries. It was an easy target, because London was dogmatical­ly committed to pure free trade.

Recent research helps distinguis­h between trade and offshoring patterns that have the mutual benefits — and those that don’t. When the trade or offshoring partner is another high-income country, US wages tend to increase. But when it’s with low-income countries, US wages decline, particular­ly for unskilled or medium-skilled workers.

These wage effects are not just in manufactur­ing, but in the same job categories of other industries. Manufactur­ing generally has higher pay scales than services. Yet as increased imports and offshoring put pressure on manufactur­ing jobs, there is a domino effect as displaced workers move into lower-paid services. Wages shrink across the board.

The pressure for lower wages when importing from low-income nations has a far greater effect than repercussi­ons from offshoring. It is most striking when China is the partner. For every 10 per cent increase in Chinese imports, US wages across the affected jobs fell by 6.6 per cent. In almost all cases, the wage reductions hit low-wage workers hardest, particular­ly non-high school graduates.

US manufactur­ing employment reached its peak in the late 1970s, and has been generally declining since. There is a clear break in 2000, however, the year China joined the World Trade Organisati­on and began a concentrat­ed, and catastroph­ic, drive on US product markets.

Factory job losses

From 2000 through 2009, the US lost roughly 6 million factory jobs, or about a third of the total in 2000. There has been a recent modest recovery, 850,000 manufactur­ing jobs added since 2010 — but too little for much satisfacti­on.

China’s destructiv­e brand of competitio­n is especially grating. Consider the example of Nucor Corp., one of the world’s most efficient steelmaker­s. Nucor uses only 0.4 hour of labour to make a tonne of steel, says Dan DiMicco, former chief executive, or about $8 to $10 in wages. It relies mostly on scrap steel for its raw material, while China uses iron ore, which is more expensive, and its shipping cost to the US is about $40 a tonne.

Even if Chinese labour were free, DiMicco maintains in his new book, American Made: Why Making Things Will Return Us to Greatness, there is no way the Chinese steel producers could undersell Nucor in its home market. Yet, over much of the past year, low-cost Chinese steel has flooded US markets, which, DiMicco says, is clear evidence of illegal “dumping”. Beijing, of course, says it complies with all fair trade rules.

But China plays by different rules. Its powerful manufactur­ing enterprise­s are largely state-owned, and blessed with a host of subsidies, including Party-determined prices for financing, land purchases, taxes and fuel. Worse than that, in recent years, the Chinese government has been pressuring European and US companies to transfer proprietar­y technologi­es as a condition of winning major contracts.

A prime example may be the partnershi­p between the state-owned Commercial Aircraft Corporatio­n of China and a consortium of seven US aerospace companies, led by Boeing Company and General Electric, to build a jumbo jet competitor.

All the companies are contributi­ng substantia­l proprietar­y technologi­es to China. GE’s avionics, one of its crown jewels, are a key part of the deal. Advanced

The pressure for lower wages when importing from low-income nations has a far greater effect than repercussi­ons from offshoring. It is most striking when China is the partner. For every 10 per cent increase in Chinese imports, US wages across the affected jobs fell by 6.6 per cent.

avionics, however, are also of keen interest to the Chinese military. GE insists it can prevent any technology leakages to the military, and swears that any evidence to the contrary means terminatio­n of the entire project. Sure.

Beijing’s record here is not encouragin­g. China now has the world’s largest high-speed-rail industry, built in record time — after buying equipment from Siemens, Kawasaki Heavy Industries and other Western companies and then reverse-engineerin­g it.

China’s state-owned businesses now market their rail systems throughout the world at prices about half that of Western vendors. That’s becoming standard procedure. Most computer deals in China require that the government gets a copy of the vendor’s source code, the key to the success of any technology enterprise.

China is a great country, with extraordin­arily talented and industriou­s people. But the government bureaucrac­y has been revealed as deeply corrupt, and often pays only lip-service to rules of the road.

A few decades ago when a US steel company complained about foreign dumping, one could assume they were seeking protection from more advanced competitor­s. That is no longer the case, especially with a company like Nucor.

It’s high time that predatory competitor­s like China are treated with judicious doses of their own medicine. China is not included in the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p, but its rapid economic progress is a blueprint for every aspiring developing nation.

Only when the US is prepared to ensure fair treatment for its own companies, should Washington offer free trade considerat­ion to yet more budding competitor­s.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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