Monday, 2 February 2009

Counter-intuitive (4)

As we know, recessions tend to trigger protectionism. Mark's Any pointed out that the whole British job for British workers row that has flared up is tilting at windmills, to which I commented "While I am rabidly anti-EU, I can also see that international labour mobility is probably a good thing...".

Turning to Obama Bin Laden's call to "Buy American", Tim W compiled a list of people who were against the idea over at the ASI 'Blog. The ever readable Karl Denninger (an opponent of bail outs; a proponent of debt-for-equity swaps and as far from protectionist as you can get), came up with a good argument in favour of "Buy American".

To summarise, "... a big part of the current mess [is] a direct consequence of the mercantilism of China, India and many other "low-cost" producers in the world... Global free trade eh? Uh, not quite. These same nations have a hodge-podge of subsidies for local producers for their economy, thereby making import from us either uneconomic or, when they can't manage it that way, they put procedural, capital control and other hurdles up that make "free trade" a joke going the other direction. "Buy American" is perfectly legitimate for government spending in an economic stimulus bill. After all, is not the essential purpose of such a bill to stimulate OUR economy? It is not to stimulate the economy of CHINA, is it?"

Fair enough. On the one hand, if some producer is prepared to sell goods at below cost (which with China is undoubtedly the case), the response should either be "Great! Bring it on!" or the importing government could just slap import duties on the goods equivalent to the subsidy at the other end to level the playing field.

If you believe in free trade, we could allow those subsidised goods to come in without tarrifs, which surely frees up our own economy to shift to higher value stuff? As somebody once said, 'they sell us a hundred million shirts, we sell them one Airbus'. The problem is of course that not only did China and Japan export like maniacs, but they did it on credit - they lent a lot of the proceeds straight back to Western countries. That's why those two countries now hold one-third of global currency reserves.

If the West had had the good sense to invest that money in high tech stuff, then we would have benefitted doubly from the deal. The problem is, we didn't - governments allowed all the cheap credit to go into a property price bubble that doesn't add one dollar, one pound or one Euro to our economic output.

Hmm. But, as DBC Reed explained, diverting cheap credit away from land speculation and into more productive activities is actually quite simple...

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

Absolute open free trade is good in principle. But that could be compared to a large flat pan full of water. Ever tried to carry one any distance? The slightest unbalance and the water rushes off to one side and most of it is lost. Large ships have dwarf bulkheads to prevent this effect sinking them. Until relatively recently distance provided some economic protection against this type of rush. Globally we are now in a very unbalanced position. Maybe some form of protectionism will prevent a rush of wealth to one part of the world, which may ultimately sink us all. Just askin'.

Mark Wadsworth said...

TEV "until relatively recently"?

AFAIAA, we have had global trade for centuries if not millennia, the Silk Road, tea from China, all that sort of thing.

George Carty said...

Overland trade in the pre-railway era was extremely expensive, which is why the Silk Road was the Silk road, as few other commodities had a high enough value-to-weight ratio for the trade to be viable.