Goodbye, Globalization?
As American politicians turn against economic openness, history suggests the consequences could be dire.

At the dawn of the 21st century, countries in both the Global South and the former communist bloc were falling over each other to lower their trade barriers, liberalize their capital markets, and encourage their best and brightest to study in the West. Multinational firms were expanding their supply chains to bring workers from Mexico, China, Vietnam, India, and Russia into their fold. The internet had created entirely new ways for information to cross borders. Labor productivity was soaring and global poverty was falling.
U.S. politicians largely embraced this trend. Republicans and Democrats cooperated to negotiate trade agreements with both longtime friends and former foes. All this took place in a context of public optimism: In January 2000, 69 percent of Americans told Gallup they were satisfied with the country's direction.
Two decades later, things have not quite worked out the way many champions of free trade hoped at the end of President Bill Clinton's administration. Neither China nor Russia turned into liberal, free market democracies. Two decades of unending war have been peppered by financial crises, populist uprisings, and pandemics. Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing sanctions are merely the latest shock to the system.
Countries are now falling over each other to erect new barriers to trade, impose capital controls, and restrict migration flows. U.S. politicians have embraced this trend too: The strongest throughline between the Donald Trump and Joe Biden presidencies has been their hostility to economic openness. All this is taking place in a context of public pessimism: In March, just 22 percent of Americans told Gallup they were satisfied with the country's direction.
The souring of the 21st century has triggered accusations and recriminations about who bears responsibility for the end of "the end of history." Free trade advocates note the enormous benefits that economic liberalization has brought to the global economy and decry the rise of neo-mercantilism in the United States and elsewhere. But free trade's critics offer a challenging rebuttal: They argue the last two decades have exposed the internal contradictions of neoliberalism. As they see it, we're witnessing the natural response of societies buffeted by the vicissitudes of the free market; economic openness sowed the seeds of its own destruction.
There is a kernel of truth to this. But a kernel of truth is not the whole truth, and globalization's proponents do not need to completely rethink their priors. The benefits of trade and international engagement persist even in the current era.
Advocates of free markets still have a strong case to make, and they need to make it. This particular argument against an open global economy has been made before. When it triumphed, the result was world war.
Polanyi's Challenge
To understand the intellectual roots of today's resistance to free markets, the book to examine is Karl Polanyi's The Great Transformation.
Polanyi, writing in 1944, wanted to understand how the world had arrived at a low moment of depression, fascism, and war. Where writers like F.A. Hayek saw socialism's rise as a tragic result of state interference in free markets, Polanyi viewed it as the ineluctable backlash against those same markets' volatility.
There are three arguments in The Great Transformation that require recognition and response from free market enthusiasts. First, Polanyi pushed back vigorously against the assumption that unregulated markets were the "natural" state of the world. Governments take concerted action, Polanyi noted, to maintain the modern capitalist system.
One present-day example is intellectual property rights. To incentivize innovation and creativity, governments enforce laws that protect trademarks, patents, and copyrights. If the state did not do that, innovation would be lower but diffusion would be much more rapid, as films, software, and pharmaceuticals would be pirated almost immediately. The tradeoff of more innovation for less diffusion might be worth it, but getting there requires purposive government action.
Polanyi's second argument was that the ultimate result of laissez faire policies is "the demolition of society." According to The Great Transformation, human beings inevitably resist efforts to turn labor into a commodity. Market liberalization would produce rising inequality. And then, Polanyi's predictions turned rather gloomy: "Robbed of the protective covering of cultural institutions, human beings would perish from the effect of social exposure; they would die as the victims of acute social dislocation through vice, perversion, crime, and starvation. Nature would be reduced to its elements, neighborhoods and landscapes defiled, rivers polluted, military safety jeopardized, the power to produce food and raw materials destroyed."
Finally, Polanyi described what he called the "double movement." If the state consciously tried to create a marketplace disembedded from the rest of society, it would trigger blowback against markets. Exactly how that double movement manifested itself could vary. While socialists might call for expanded state support of the less fortunate, another possible response would be xenophobic nationalism. Polanyi drew a straight line from 19th century globalization to the horrors of the 1930s and '40s.
How accurate is all this in describing the current moment? If we look at the United States, we can see undeniable similarities. The hidden shocks from liberalizing trade with China and migration from Latin America, combined with the very prominent shock of the 2008 financial crisis, produced a lot of social disruption in the last 15 years. Throw in climate change, a pandemic, and great-power rivalries, and suddenly Polanyi's hyperbolic description of a society ravaged by the market starts to sound familiar.
Consciously or unconsciously, both left-wing and right-wing critics of the global economy rely on Polanyi's logic to connect the dots between neoliberalism and the current state of the world. In February, journalist Glenn Greenwald argued that Canadian trucker protests were "a long time in the making," saying the underlying discontent reflected "mass, widespread anger and even hatred toward the neoliberal ruling class throughout the West." That sentiment, he said, was bound to "find still-more extreme expressions."
Tucker Carlson's rants on Fox News are often premised on a similar logic. In April, for example, he claimed that "neoliberalism is looting with a smokescreen of race and gender politics so you won't notice that it happened." That ideology, he said, is "a cover for the distribution of wealth, a distribution that has become more lopsided in our age than at any age ever," representing "a shocking discredit to capitalism."
Testing the Bicycle Theory
The Great Transformation is an important critique, and it is unsurprising that people like Greenwald and Carlson have gravitated to some form of its arguments. Still, there are clear problems with applying it to the modern world.
To begin with, the countries that heeded Polanyi's warnings the most are facing the most severe populist blowback. The entire ethos of the European Union was to integrate the continent's economies while supplying an ample social safety net for those in need. Despite these efforts to cushion the market's effects, 21st century populism was percolating in Europe well before Trump won the American presidency, particularly in the countries with the strongest social safety nets. Hostility to economic migration has been a recurring theme of European politics for the last two decades, from fears of "Polish plumbers" inundating Western Europe to more recent backlashes against Syrian and Afghan refugees. Even Nordic states such as Sweden have turned far more nativist in the last decade. It seems implausible to blame laissez faire capitalism for this blowback.
Research on the rise of populism provides further reason to be skeptical of that thesis. Most analyses of support for Brexit and Trump—most prominently from political scientists Pippa Norris and Ronald Inglehart—have found that cultural backlash was the predominant factor. To put it crudely, working-class whites reacted to perceived losses in social and economic standing by embracing a reactionary brand of politics and blaming immigrants and minorities for their troubles. As Cas Mudde, one of the deans of populism research, wrote a few years ago, the debate between cultural backlash and economic anxiety was debated by populist scholars for decades, and settled in favor of the cultural backlash hypothesis.
Also contrary to Polanyi's thesis, most Americans have not turned against globalization. In the United States, there is a striking mismatch between the way politicians talk about how voters think about trade and immigration and the way voters actually think about these issues.
According to the politicians, Americans are fed up with the job-destroying impact of international trade and the wage-lowering impact of immigration. That take was apparent in Congress' response to Biden's first State of the Union address. The biggest applause line was the president's promise that "when we use taxpayer dollars to rebuild America, we are going to buy American: buy American products to support American jobs."
Polling data paint a different picture. In 2021, according to Gallup, 79 percent of Americans viewed trade positively—a record number. While that percentage dropped to 63 percent in 2022, it was still considerably higher than it was during the heyday of globalization in the late 1990s. Gallup's results on immigration are similar: From 2000 to 2022, the percentage of Americans who wanted more immigration more than tripled, while the percentage who wanted less immigration fell by nearly half.
But even if hostility to globalization does not appeal to the median American voter, it does have some appeal to the pivotal American voter. In the last few election cycles, the key to victory has been through the Rust Belt, and that meant demonstrating fealty to the idea that America used to be great before globalization. Furthermore, supporters of free trade and immigration do not place a high priority on those issues, while its salience for opponents is much higher. That explains why U.S. Trade Representative Katherine Tai is convinced that Hillary Clinton lost in 2016 in no small part due to the Trans-Pacific Partnership, a proposed trade pact among the United States and 11 other countries.
In response to this political reality, successive administrations have taken whacks at the open global economy. The Trump administration withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, sabotaged the World Trade Organization (WTO), raised tariffs across a wide variety of goods, launched a trade war with China, and expended significant effort to reduce migration to the United States. The Biden administration has continued most of these policies.
No progress has been made on reviving the WTO as a force for trade liberalization. There has been a moratorium on new trade deals. Tai has insisted despite all evidence to the contrary that the China tariffs provide bargaining leverage, so the trade war with China persists. The Biden administration has made scant effort to increase immigration flows.
The two administrations' signature foreign economic deals reflect their resistance to the open global economy. The Trump administration renegotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement, which became the more restrictive United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement (USMCA). The Biden administration launched the Indo-Pacific Economic Framework for Prosperity to entice partners away from excessive dependence on China. The most telling fact about this proposed agreement is that it does not include what trade negotiators call "market access"—i.e., reduced import barriers. This is a trade deal with no additional trade in it.
Although critics like Greenwald and Carlson attack the current administration as neoliberal, Biden's team is just as prone to repeating Polanyi's critique as they are. "To Biden's officials," Politico noted in May, "the last four decades of neoliberal economic policy—pursued through tax cuts, weaker regulations and pro-globalization trade deals—are largely to blame for today's spiraling inequality and economic nationalism."
The response to Russia's unprovoked invasion of Ukraine intensified the attack on global openness. The unprecedented sanctions imposed on Russia have segmented the global economy, increasing food and fuel prices. More than 700 multinational corporations pulled back from their operations in Russia, far exceeding what was legally required. The longer the war goes on, the more permanent the spike in geopolitical risk seems. Little wonder that a host of investment letters joined BlackRock's Larry Fink in warning that Russia's invasion "has put an end to the globalization we have experienced over the last three decades."
Once upon a time, when the United States was the international leader of trade liberalization, policy wonks talked about the "bicycle theory" of trade negotiations. The metaphor was simple: For all the benefits of freer trade, ideological and interest-group opposition to it was always strong. If trade negotiators continued to push for greater openness, the trade bicycle would maintain speed and be easy to ride. But if momentum stalled, the whole edifice would tip over like a bicycle that slows to a crawl. Protectionist forces would agitate for exceptions, carve-outs, and restrictions, making the global economy less and less free.
In the next few years, we will find out if the bicycle theory was right, because it is safe to say that U.S. economic liberalization has ground to a halt. Thanks to Polanyi's double movement, over the past five years the United States and the global economy have halted the push toward openness and are trending toward closure.
Making Economies Less Resilient
The Great Transformation posited that a shift toward unregulated markets would trigger a social backlash, leading to a re-regulated economy. But what happens when a more protectionist economy creates its own forms of economic malaise? Maybe the next double movement will force a return to a more open economy.
Inflation is the most obvious way that increased protectionism has been a drag on the U.S. economy. One underrated benefit of an open global economy is that trade increases productivity, which allows the economy to grow at a faster rate without triggering price hikes. This is particularly true of the United States. Greater demand for goods can be absorbed by greater imports; greater demand for labor can be met by a large influx of foreign workers.
During the pandemic years, the federal government sustained demand through fiscal and monetary stimulus. It paid considerably less attention to the supply side of the ledger, helping fuel a surge of inflation unseen since the 1970s.
Americans continued to buy imported goods at record levels, regardless of the tariffs, and that contributed to rising prices. The Peterson Institute for International Economics estimates that if the United States ended the trade war with China, eliminated steel and aluminum tariffs, and ended softwood lumber duties on Canada, the inflation rate would be cut by 1.3 percentage points. "Removing the China tariffs is the single-largest policy lever to bring down inflation that President Biden has," economist Jason Furman declared in April. Within the Biden administration, both Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen and (now-former) Deputy National Security Adviser Daleep Singh suggested lifting tariffs as one way of fighting short-term inflation.
By itself, trade liberalization will ameliorate inflation but not cure it. Indeed, many critics of globalization argue that the global supply chain stresses caused by the pandemic reinforced the case for insourcing. The Biden administration has echoed that argument, which overlooks something economists have been trying to explain for years: Countries that are more integrated into global value chains experience far fewer price shocks than less integrated countries.
The idea that globalization enhances economic resilience is counterintuitive, especially as China seems to shut down its port facilities on a regular basis. So, consider the baby formula crisis that emerged this spring.
This is a market where the United States is usually self-sufficient: 98 percent of infant formula consumed by Americans is manufactured in the United States. The market suffered a supply shock when the formula produced at one Michigan plant was recalled due to suspected bacterial contamination; the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) subsequently shut down the plant.
That is exactly the sort of situation in which imports can smooth out supply. But thanks to the Trump and Biden administrations, that did not happen. Infant formula is subject to tariff-rate quotas of 17.5 percent after certain quantities are imported. The USMCA sharply limited how much formula Canada could export to the United States. The FDA prevented imports from the European Union over picayune disputes about labeling.
The result: By May, more than 40 percent of stores were out of baby formula, and the military was airlifting emergency supplies from Europe. "We're seeing what happens when we reduce trade with other countries for an essential good," The Atlantic's Derek Thompson observed. "We're more vulnerable to emergencies like a bacteria-infested plant in Michigan." Protectionism and excessive regulation make an economy less resilient during such emergencies.
An immigration shortfall, created by the pandemic and increased restrictions, is also taking a toll. Economists estimate that 2 million fewer working-age immigrants entered the United States than would have been the case if pre-2020 migration patterns had persisted. Contrary to public perception, most of these missing immigrants would have been college-educated. The sectors of the economy that are most dependent on immigrants, including hospitality, food service, and STEM-related fields, have seen especially high rates of unfilled jobs. And that, in turn, has helped push prices higher.
The Trump and Biden administrations have either imposed or maintained a welter of policies designed to restrict and regulate the cross-border movement of goods, services, and people. That has made the United States not more resilient but less productive and more vulnerable to local shocks. As Edward Alden recently warned in Foreign Policy, "it is often a small step from prudent self-sufficiency to damaging attempts at autarky."
The Next Reagan
One could argue that there have been three double movements in the last 150 years. In response to the 19th century era of globalization, the major economies of Europe launched a series of trade wars against each other in a prelude to World War I. The global economy opened up again in the 1920s. But as the Great Depression worsened, the large economies ratcheted up tariffs, restricted immigration, or engaged in beggar-thy-neighbor policies in the run-up to World War II.
The last double movement came after the United States went off the gold standard in 1971. The result was a decade of inflation, a surge in commodity prices, and an explosion of protectionism. But unlike the previous two waves, the backlash of the 1970s was channeled into President Ronald Reagan's sunny optimism of the 1980s.
Reagan was not a consistent free trader. His administration pioneered the practice of voluntary export restraints—in which the exporting country voluntarily restricts its exports, a tactic that hurts consumers while benefiting domestic producers—that Trump's chief trade negotiator embraced as his preferred tactic. But Reagan negotiated trade deals, supported increases in immigration, and repeatedly argued that globalization would benefit the United States and the classical liberal values it held dear. When Reagan made Americans more optimistic about the future, he made them more enthusiastic about an open global economy.
Americans are anything but optimistic right now, and critics will continue to use Polanyi-like arguments to blame the excesses of neoliberalism. But protectionists have been in power for the last six years, and their policies are partially responsible for steep inflation, goods shortages, and a faltering service sector. Perhaps this next decade will produce a successor to Reagan, someone who can marry hard-headed economics with the optimism necessary to sell it.
The alternative is dire. "The true nature of the international system under which we were living was not realized until it failed," Polanyi wrote in The Great Transformation. "Hardly anyone understood the political function of the international monetary system; the awful suddenness of the transformation thus took the world completely by surprise….When it broke, the effect was bound to be instantaneous."
This article originally appeared in print under the headline "Goodbye, Globalization?."
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm a free trader, but, finding free trade is impossible . Look at the rules the EU uses to protect their industries. When it comes to drugs, the whole world is living off us with their price controls. Hell, we can't have free trade here in the states with California and other states banning products from other stares and making up their own rules for nationally available products .
The problem with “globalism” is the “globalists”. Top Men who’ve managed to put themselves in charge of the “free trade” we were enjoying, for various greater goods (like climate change).
I am creating eighty North American nation greenbacks per-hr. to finish some web services from home. I actually have not ever thought adore it would even realisable but (oaf-32) my friend mate got $27k solely in four weeks simply doing this best assignment and conjointly she convinced Maine to avail. Look further details going this web-page.
.
---------->>> https://smartpay21.pages.dev
Get rid of all of them. The Whole Davos crowd. Every one of them, along with their authoritarian thralls like Trudeau, Biden, Macron, etc. are an existential threats to humanity, and the American way of life in particular.
American rights > Global Marxist lives
the problem with globalism isn't trade or economics, it is giving up your sovereignty. That is always a great mistake.
I do agree there is no fair trade for free trade
I'm all for global free trade. I'm dead set against global managed trade.
"Free trade"? What kind of capitalism is that?
The EU also largely prohibits government subsidies for industry so that industries in different EU countries can compete more fairly.
That is not true at all. There's all sorts of subsidies and protectionism across the EU to protect and promote specific industries.
Hell, the 'renewable' energy sector gets massive subsidies.
And let's not forget 'geographic designators' and obtuse rules on what can be labeled as a jam, jelly, or preserve. Then there are the rules on the maxim curvature of bananas sold directly to consumers, rules on how to sort tomato's, etc.
SRG never lied or misleads... She is as honest as the day is long. Come on man.
Essentially just a troll.
https://enterprise.gov.ie/en/what-we-do/eu-internal-market/eu-state-aid-rules/what-is-state-aid-/
https://tem.fi/en/eu-rules-on-state-aid#:~:text=European%20Union%20law%20generally%20prohibits,functioning%20of%20the%20internal%20market.
There are other sources.
I wouldn't expect seppos to know much about affairs outside the US, and my expectations are confirmed.
Remember when I said the path to authoritarianism starts with disarming the populace and you replied with a "nuh-uh" link confirming Hitler did in fact make it a point to disarm his opponents.
Should we check these ones out to see if you own-goaled again?
One need only look at France (the EU'S most vocal proponent) to see how much horseshit that statement is.
Except France gets fined or sometimes has to get aided industries to disgorge their subsidies. But you didn't know that.
See for example https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/IT/ip_19_4991
"The EU also largely prohibits government subsidies for industry so that industries in different EU countries can compete more fairly."
Yeah, Airbus is just a private company, as are all the railroad lines and car companies.
F'ing idiot...
Fuck off you lying fascist asshole.
you can always tell when you upset a green haired anxiety ridden SJW when they bust out the F word.
Nice and triggered
Why do these clowns think that an insulting response means that the responder is triggered? I respond insultingly to Sevo because that is all the consideration he deserves given how he typically responds to others.
the insult is that you are a brainless hysterical SJW prog
Triggered is just a fact. Its part of your existence and due to your brain defect
Wow, did you get a prescription for those drugs or pick them up on the street? In any case, those are some awesome hallucinogens.
Howzat? California and Colorado have cannabis gummy edibles redneck states like Texas and Alabama exclude by force because Satanic Possession. This is the violation of free trade and the 9th Amendment inside the customs Union the Constitution created. Then came prohibitionist superstition groping for the violence of law to wield against imagined sinners. Even the 21A repeal of Prohibition was a clawback of power to use Federal coercion to back local populist bans on anything pleasurable, entertaining or fun.
Free trade with China doesn't exist. And making ourselves dependent on them via globalization is a disaster in the making.
Not to mention, they are totalitarian murdering SOBs who are practicing slavery in Xijiang on a population-wide scale. If you trade with them you are complicit.
The answer is not to try to exclude trade with China but rather to economically pressure them. This is exactly what TTP was designed to do. To force China to compete for trade and in doing so being forced to conform to requirements of TTP.
We should be economically strangling them. By their own admission they are our enemy. Although you likely see them as something to aspire to, I is the icky anti gay policies. And your kind ignore their blatant racism.
When we first opened our markets to China in the 80s, the were a third-world backwater whose army still had used trucks with hand-cranked starters.
Now....
Yep, that economic pressure has been SO successful so far.
As LeBron James says. Fuck the slaves
Can they dunk?
Leftists give zero shifts about oppressed minorities. Unless said minorities can be weaponized as a cause. Same thing with the anti war movement. Which is only a thing when republicans are in office.
We've been doing nothing but raising our standard of living from trading with China, numb nuts.
It's your fault we can't produce anything in America. Work that problem out, and stop thinking about other countries.
Cheap stuff is worth the price of slave labor!
Yeah, because Americans are too busy eating fat everyday and sleeping. It's a sign to educate yourself for a more skilled job. If you are trying to live in a 2bdr house by sewing together beanie babies, get the fuck out America.
*sleeping in a bed
You’re a little right. We do need to get the democrats the fuck out of America. Then we can so,ve all the other problems much easier.
You advocate shipping our manufacturing to China and you blame me for not wanting to trade with them.
I'd also generally argue that you want to ensure that any given region is overall capable of being self-sufficient for everything essential. Otherwise, globalization is like having a noose around your neck with the only thing keeping you alive being a badly-made ladder that people are actively trying to knock out from under your feet...during an earthquake. You're going to die, the only question is when. There's simply too many ways the transportation infrastructure can break down.
If you're generally self-sufficient, globalization serves as simply a safety net, a way to ensure that if you have an unexpected shortage, you aren't screwed: you can import it from somewhere else while you get things fixed, IF the transportation infrastructure is working. But you should always remember that there are no exceptions to the simple fact that just because you can do something, that doesn't mean you should.
You are absolutely correct that all things being equal, economic openness is far more desirable than closed economies. But what you fugazis either don't know or refuse to acknowledge because of concerns of political correctness is that economic openness combined with a gigantic welfare state is a disaster inevitably waiting to happen. You can have one or you can have the other, but you cannot have both at the same time without eventually bankrupting and ruining yourself, which is what many of the western countries are doing.
I suggest the same contradiction, and inevitable negative outcome, combines open borders and generous welfare state. In fact, paying people not to work would seem to deny any claimed economic benefit from immigrants, but perhaps I don't know how to think like OBL.
I was just about to say this.. In fact mass immigration is specifically this. You can have one or the other, not both!
Inevidable? Dude it's here
Me buying Nikes does not affect global politics. I fucking hate you stormfront faggots. Fuck your chemical tariffs.
How bout we drop you at the Uighur camp?
Looks like a CCP troll
It'd be hard for you to get into my house if I need to put a gun to your head.
And on ignore you go...
Fuck off and die you monkeypox riddled Obama dick-licker.
You're a faggot stormfront motherfucker. You guys use the same language as those stupid 4chan sites. Get the fuck off this site.
Good luck in your battle against moneypox, you fuckin twink.
My hope is the Chinese will eventually rise up and slaughter their Marxist masters.
"Me buying Nikes does not affect global politics. "
naïve? or stupid?
Maybe both.
I understand the open borders/welfare state paradox. Same for minimum wage. But, I don't get the economic openness/welfare state problem. Can you explain why free trade is a disaster in combination with a welfare state?
Welfare states themselves tend to be a disaster because they invariably become the upper classes asking the classe lower down to foot the bill. The more economic activity there is to spread the burden out over, the more you can put off having a critical mass of the population concluding that not working is the better option. (And you can only delay this, because there will be too many politicians who will be fine using the welfare state to buy themselves votes to not have the finances ultimately implode.)
From a merely practical view, just in time supply and reliance on a few countries for manufacture has led to supply chain collapse and political blackmail. The old saws about eggs and baskets as well as hoping for the best but planning for the worst still apply in the world we live in.
Trade all over the place, but back out of China a lot. Contract with suppliers in many countries, not just one. Keep warehouses of parts in the US to supply manufacture for at least a few weeks instead of a day or two.
Or let people continue buying Chinese products, and you can leave them the fuck alone.
What does Xi's little yellow dick test like?
Having trouble understanding you with CCP dick in all your holes.
It makes more sense to set up more relationships with China’s neighbors. Who do not present any threat to America. Which will help starve China and bankrupt them. Cutting off some of their access to food would be good too. Really make them struggle.
No, it makes more sense that you just don't involve your self with other people's business decisions, fucktard.
Idiot
I’m a free markets guy. But, there are some facts that the neoliberals seem to be deliberately evading. Free trade and open borders do bring about a net economic benefit. But, the key word there is net. There are, in fact, losers as well as winners. And the losers in this equation seem to mostly be the First World working and lower middle classes. At the same time, they see the cosmopolitan middle, upper, and upper middle classes continue to benefit from uninterrupted government interventions and protections. They see bank bailouts and the Fed propping up asset bubbles (including on real estate that leads to higher housing costs). They see the ranks of the government bureaucracy swelling continually. They see regulation expanding the ranks of well-heeled compliance professions. They see the government propping up higher ed. And they’re told that their suffering is all for the better, since those beneficiaries of government largesse can now afford a Mexican cleaning lady and a new Tesla.
If libertarianism is only going to focus on market reforms enjoyed by the New Class at their expense, we should hardly be surprised when they turn to populists.
Throw in some white guilt and the demand for a public stage for virtue signaling, and you have the New Democratic Party.
Add to your list decades of near zero interest rates that benefit borrowers and punish savers.
The first key word is "free". We are a heavily regulated, heavily taxed, heavily indebted market trading with communist dictatorships. That is not "free trade" even if you drop all trade barriers. Unilaterally ensuring the lowest prices for US consumers isn't "free trade", it's nothing more than government handouts for political gain, and leads to serious malinvestment.
The correct level of tariffs and import restrictions are those impose on foreign production the same costs and overheads we impose on domestic producers. If you do that, places like China lose their illusory competitive advantage.
Yes, thank you. Also to consider as that the net benefit from immigration goes into the hands of employers, not employees or the state via taxes.
That's a feature not a symptom to these types of people!
"I'm a free-market guy", but then you decide to throw out the term, neo-liberal.
You're not a free market guy. Stop commenting on this site.
Asshole
No, you leave. We belong here. This is OUR place. You’re just an interloper and likely a paid CCP troll. Either way, fuck off. You have even less business here than Pedo Jeffy, or Buttplug. And neither of them has a goddamn place here.
Me: I'm a free-market guy [and proceeds to point out a litany of areas where neo-liberals have violated free market principles to their own benefit]
truewords: You used the term neo-liberal! You don't believe in free markets!
You are not a "free market guy" either, you are a "I want cheap and free stuff guy" and you really don't care who suffers to give it to you.
In short, you are scum.
That's Polanyi's first point. 'Free markets' do require government actions and structures to create the conditions under which free markets can arise. And because there are winners and losers in everything, it also means that government power gets distorted and corrupted so that the winners always remain winners (and the losers always lose).
Enough elapsed time and you get a large part of the population that is disgruntled and angry that they have no voice in self-governance - and another part of the population that is entitled about its power and believes that any change is evil and harmful.
Basically there is no such thing as 'free market' or 'capitalism' without a serious understanding of how politics, power, and culture made it happen. The assumptions of neoclassical economics in particular do not tend to include any of that.
That Adam Smith guy wrote about it, but we got narratives to push.
Globalization is not the same thing as global trade.
The so-called globalizationists are deeply committed central planners. Elitists with visions of directing all the world's masses according to their enlightened goals.
global trade is great and globalization is a nightmare.
One thing I hate about globalization is that it's always trying to push the nonsensical idea that culture isn't a thing, or at least that it shouldn't be. That the only real meaningful difference between, for example, Park Slope Welchie Boy and a member of the Yanomami tribe living in the Amazon is that the Yanomami simply hasn't been sufficiently exposed to all the wonders of Amazon and smart phones yet.
In reality, not only does everyone in the world not share the same thoughts, ideas, and opinions on how to live their lives. but many people actually strongly resent the globalists' push to make everyone around the world the same, nothing more than a consumer and a commodity for them to make money on.
and if you give the Amazonians Amazon, and smart phones, you violate the Prime Directive.
I used to think this way as well, that all people are the same. It's a message that pressed hard in Christianity, Buddhism, and New Age movements based on Hinduism. It's also a reaction to the World Wars, which were seen as based on nationalism, which is true. The truth is somewhere in the middle - if you deny the natural differences between individuals and cultures, you are denying reality, and you're going to get poor results. You can also apply liberal principles of equal protection to every human being. Of course, equal protection does not mean equal privilege,
Very interesting comment. Know what my main take from it is? Amazon is guilty of cultural appropriation of the Yanomami! (Did I mention that I’m an actual registered California voter?)
Central planners must go.
Come on. Who really wants full-cycle free markets, with ultimate responsibility for rewards AND risks? Who does not want some selective protection or promotion, and some protection when things turn sour?
The business cycle in free market economies is actually much less severe than in the Federal Reserve-based, government regulated system we have.
It is government's delayed and flawed response to changes in the economy that causes the extreme and damaging ups-and-downs in our economy, as well as persistent malinvestment.
This paragraph really annoys me:
First off: Goddammit, the pandemic was not the problem; it was the government lockdowns which did the damage. You're allegedly an adult writing about government fuckups; yet you cover up for them. Every time I see this, it makes me doubt every thing else your write, both in this article and in anything else you write. I'm commenting now, without reading the rest of your article, because I have so little interest in reading the rest of what you wrote. If you can't bear to write the truth here, why should I think you are brave enough to intelligent enough to write the truth in the rest of, and why should I spend the effort trying to uncover what else you have papered over?
Second, notice how many of those shocks you cite are directly caused by governments. I hope the rest of your article mentions this, but I won't know.
And "climate change" is a similar coverup. The crisis is not caused by the climate and its natural cycles and variations, but the government subsidies of marginal students and marginal science, politicians backing this bullshit, trashing power grids and wasting money.
So no, I'm not going to read the rest of this article. If you can't be honest here, if this one paragraph has two huge bloopers which paper over government perfidy, then nothing you have to say can interest me.
And climate change hasn't affected anything yet.
Precisely. For both COVID and climate change, the problems lie entirely with government reactions, not the underlying matter.
All of his supposed causes are really politicians braying for campaign funds and expansion of State control.
...AND that all articles EVERYWHERE parroting the accepted wisdom... that climate change and covid etc. etc. are the culprits helps deflect from and/or hide diagnosing the obvious problem to be solved.
Govt interventions for these should be studied like the NTSB forensically studies plane crashes. Then maybe we could have the real conversation.
And ADMIT that WW1 and WW2 were opium wars provoked by clumsy American overreaction to the Chinese boycott of 1903? Then we'd have to admit Delano was a dope trader, and that Britain, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Austro-Hungary, Switzerland and probably Italy and Russia were involved in refining opium into smack for export to primitives--and exporting coke to keep them from dying of opiate-induced constipation. Hah... nevaire!
Hey people are dieing of heart attacks due to climate
Exactly, despite rapid sea level rise, Obama's home on Martha's Vineyard still sits, unaffected.
Hey, yeah, do me a favor and never go on reason.com again.
But people are free to buy slave labor products!
Are you really the one that wants to do the slave labor? And with the slave labor, you get to live in a 4 acre property with health benefits? Oh man, if only the voters appreciated white people more.
Asshole
Has anyone seen this particular troll before today? The one who’s telling several people never to return to Reason?
In Colonial America the slave role was originally occupied by indentured migrants and criminal transportees. All involuntary labor was performed by such pink people and local convicts. A black plantation owner in Virginia imported white "slaves" to work his farm "Angola." Only later did Africans arrive.
Hey, do me a favor and die immediately.
Wow, Iraq war neocon and 2008 bailout supporter Daniel Drezner, appearing in an ostensibly libertarian magazine to push for global governance.
Reason's not even pretending anymore.
Pretending is so 20th century. But note that lying is still a thing.
Perception plus.
"Free trade" doesn't mean "no tariff imports", it means unrestricted trade between free markets in two countries. There has never been "free trade" between the US and anybody.
What the US have had is a system in which selected goods could be imported with low or no tariffs from certain other nations, to the benefit of robber barons, financial firms, and their political cronies. That system has operated to the great detriment of Americans and Europeans.
"Free trade" is not tariff-free imports from China, paid for by debt. "Free trade" would be tariff-free AND barrier free imports and exports of goods to poorer democratic nations in South America, something the agriculture lobby does not want.
Good! Trade between the heavily regulated markets in the US and Europe and communist dictatorships like China is, by definition, not "free trade", and there are good reasons to restrict it. Regular Americans have always been harshly restricted by "capital controls"; maybe if similar controls are imposed on corporations, they will be loosened for Americans. And migration flows need to be restricted as long as the US and Europe remain social welfare states where taxpayers give you hundreds of thousands of dollars in handouts merely for having been born.
Eliminate the welfare state and create actual free markets at home, and at that point, we can talk about implementing free trade and open borders.
Free trade is a bunch of shit. Fair trade is what matters. For example if another country taxes citizens who buy good from us, that's not fair. Our government has a duty to tax us for buying stuff from them. That's fair. Unilateral free trade that stupid libertarians promote is totally unfair. Foreigners get taxes and we don't! How fair is that? And what about subsidies? When other countries tax their citizens and use those taxes to make exports less expensive, we pay less for those good than we otherwise would. That sure ain't fair. To make it fair we should be taxed to make exports less expensive.
So all this bullshit about free trade means other countries tax their citizens to make imports more expensive and exports cheaper, while we don't.
That's just not right.
That's why we need to step up and raise taxes on imports, and raise taxes to subsidize exports. Then it will be fair.
The less taxes the better. If some protectionist dictatorship taxes their imports to protect their feeble domestic industries, it is still better if the USA doesn't tax its citizens for importing cheap stuff they want.
Bullshit. If they tax imports then we must tax stuff from them. It's only free trade when both countries operate with the same tariffs, same taxes, same laws, same intellectual property protections, same everything. Otherwise we need to fix it with taxes.
NOYB2's got it right.
You can't have free trade without free markets in both nations, and we have never had that.
It ain't free unless it's fair. The playing field must be exactly the same between nations. Otherwise we need taxes, taxes, and more taxes to fix it.
Or he’s advocating reducing all the costs that excessive regulations here cause. But screeching sophomorically is more your speed.
Increase tariffs and lower income tax commensurate to the new tariffs.
Government is better being funded by tariffs than income tax. US Central gov’s primary purpose is the interfacing between us and foreign countries. The more trade interaction we have, the more they get funded to mediate that relationship.
/sarc off
I somewhat agree with that. If you want less of something you tax it. If you want more of something you subsidize it. Income taxes are taxes on productivity. Transfer payments subsidize consumption. Doesn't that seem a bit backwards?
Tariffs are consumption taxes. It's like a sales tax on foreign goods. The nice thing about consumption taxes is that they're avoidable. Don't want to pay the tax, don't buy the stuff.
Income taxes tax productivity. Especially progressive income taxes. There's no way I'm going to go get a second job for fifteen bucks an hour when it's going to be taxed at the top rate. So there's one help wanted sign that's not coming out of the window.
So tariffs for the purpose of funding the government are not the same as protectionist tariffs that exist only to punish consumers of foreign goods. I support the former, especially in the context of getting rid of production taxes. The latter not so much.
/sarc on
See James Bovard’s “fair trade fraud” for the arguments against. Obviously, any sort of regulatory control becomes a vector for corruption. And there’s always going to be some. But the blurry goal posts of “fairness” is positively designed to make government/industry collisions to bilk consumers easier.
The real issue with China and the like isn’t fairness, it’s national security.
/sarc off
It's a matter of point of view.
If you view the economy from the producer's point of view, protectionism is great. Shuts down the competition and gives you a captive audience. And it's easy to sell under the guise of paying workers who buy stuff.
Adam Smith turned economics on its head by looking at it from the consumer's point of view. From that point of view competition is good, and government roadblocks hurt the consumer.
Unfortunately, Adam Smith has fallen out of favor, and the economics of centuries past is more popular than every.
/sarc on
*ever*
Globalism and free trade makes everyone wealthier and better off.
But if one or two large nations in your global trade network don't believe in capitalism, and have militaristic ambitions, only a fool wouldn't have a backup plan for manufacturing critical components at home.
Globalism is "a national geopolitical policy in which the entire world is regarded as the appropriate sphere for a state's influence". International socialism is globalism. In fact, very little else is. Free society embrace subsidiarity.
Tariff-free trade is not the same as free trade. You can't have free trade without free markets in both nations, and we have never had that.
Even then, free trade does not necessarily make everyone better off, it simply potentially increases overall economic efficiency. When Bill Gates walks into a bar, everybody in the bar becomes a "billionaire on average", but that doesn't change the economic fortunes of anyone.
Ridiculous. Bill Gates never walks into a bar with serfs.
However, he does own several serfboards.
Or have critical components more widely manufactured so you are not compromised by a small number of countries acting as suppliers. This is the baby formula lesson.
Also having only one domestic supplier is bad.
There should be a reasonably clear distinction between aiming towards the freer economic benefits of globalization and the political attempts at the corporatist world-government of globalism.
Carl-F "Nordstream"
No results.
Globalization means outsourcing critical resources dependencies to hostile nations. Or to nations with inimical values on worker rights, pollution, resource extraction.
Who’s Carl-F?
CTRL-F (find) molested by autocorrect
Tony’s Grindr date.
So long, farewell, auf wiedersehen, adieu
Drezner, Europe is fully globalized - now Russia has the by the balls.
Why can people - for or against - ever acknowledge that there are benefits and dangers associated with a course of action.
There are benefits and costs associated with open immigration, it's not an unalloyed good - and I say this as someone who is pro-open immigration.
Similarly, there are incredible benefits to a globalized economy - and dangers commensurate with those benefits. And, again, I say this as someone who is pro-globalization.
You hit upon a societal tendency that has gotten more and more irritating to me in our modern culture. This idea that there is a purely right way and purely wrong way to do something. The idea that one choice has all benefit and the other choice or choices are all detriment.
The ability for people to balance good and bad with any choice is just unheard-of anymore. People can't accept that their particular position carries both benefits and drawbacks. It's always 100% perfect of 100% crap. There is no middle ground.
As I’ve said before, it’s one of the reasons this publication has gone to shit. The people writing here are just advocates for certain pet issues.
And, worse, for the most part they're not even libertarian pet issues.
Global markets will result in an individual country's' markets being much more subject to economic volatility and variability. The populist response to this is to want to block the global markets and build economic silos. The more logical response is for a country to have better economic safety nets to help its citizens ride out the volatile period. Both of these are opposite of what libertarians may want, but choices will have to be made. I happen to think supporting your citizens through a volatile economic period makes more sense than attempting to block your country from global trade.
How does an economic safety net (re: income redistribution) solve the issue of a trade partner declaring themselves hostile to us and halting trade as they pivot to a war footing, exactly?
I think Europe is learning this lesson the hard way, maybe we should learn from their mistakes.
Then again, you don't actually give a damn nor do you actually believe anything you say. You simply like to toss out non-sequitur's as you've admitted in the past.
In a global economy a country should be able to pivot and find alternative trading partners. A safety net is not to redistribute income but to help people bridge difficult times. Do you consider tariffs redistribution? Because the consumers money is being taken to support some internal industry? The safety net can help during the time needed to find new trading partners.
Is the modern American economic system capitalism (free trade) or fascism? This misunderstanding is littered throughout the analysis presented in the article.
I would call it fascism.
"Captialism" is an ill-defined term used by socialists to describe other economic systems.
The US has neither free trade nor free markets.
The fascist economic system is nominally private ownership of the means of production, but subject to unlimited state control and regulation.
We don't have that kind of system yet in the US, but Democrats want to implement such a system.
Drezner has a Ph.D. in political science from Stanford. You can't expect him to know much about socialism, fascism, free markets, or capitalism.
>The fascist economic system is nominally private ownership of the means of production, but subject to unlimited state control and regulation.
See California and their creating an oversight board to set wages for fast food employees.
This is fascism, by definition.
YAF used to publish a newsletter claiming the political dictionary defined fascism as "government control of trade and production." But communism is that. The county owns your home just like China's Chan Ling Fance owns their banks and factories. The biggest difference is that fascist dictatorships do not nationalize weapons plants but do call on Jesus or Mohammed to justify their prohibition of production and trade. Anti-vice, slavery and associated deadly force is palmed off as religious freedom or racial eugenics.
I don't think globalization is going away, but perhaps countries will start to realize that things they need to survive should be produced closer to home, or have multiple sources.
Nobody wants a cobalt mine in their backyard, but that is essentially what would need to happen and it would make us look 'worse' by the idiotic metric of contributions to global CO2 levels not to mention real pollution rather than the strictly imaginary kind.
Nixon was a pretty savvy guy. He kneecapped the United States while simultaneously enriching China thus creating a new super power hostile to the United States. We'll see how long the leash of mutual trade keeps them in line.
Since the U.S. doesn't seem interested in enslaving African countries for mineral extraction, it seems improbable we'll pull ahead of China in that arena any time soon.
China is using its economy (in particular, US-debt financed, below-cost exports of consumer goods) in order to gain power and influence in the West.
That's not China being on a "leash", that's China waging economic warfare on the West. China is making significant sacrifices in order to do so, meaning that if that "trade" ends, their people would be economically better off.
China is selling stuff below cost? Oh no! We've got to tax that shit before the people buying the stuff have money left over for other things! Consumers having access to cheaper stuff is awful! Get the government to make is stop!
And there are no dangers at all associated with one country deliberately undercutting prices?
No issues at all with ever-increasimg dependence?
No chance that China might close that tap? Like Russia is doing to Europe? No chance that another country will use their soft power to enable a foreign policy of domination? Like Russia is doing to Europe.
No chance that China might close that tap? Like Russia is doing to Europe?
Great point! At any time China we could get into a shooting war with China, and as part of that war they would cut off all exports to this country! We should be self sufficient in everything! We'll be rich like North Korea!
And thanks for pointing out how economic dependence only goes one way. We're dependent upon China but they're not dependent upon us. Not at all. They could cut off exports and it wouldn't hurt their economy one bit. And they could totally survive without the stuff they import from us.
Such a wonderful point you made.
That's a false dichotomy. Of course, there is a level of trade dependence between the two countries. But...
(1) It is incorrect to call tariff-free imports from China "free trade".
(2) The fact that China is keeping these prices artificially low has the same kind of market-distorting effect that US government subsidies for consumer goods would have. If you don't want the US government to subsidize US consumer spending, you shouldn't want the Chinese government to do that either.
(3) Much of that consumer spending on Chinese goods is paid for by selling debt, capital goods, and power, something that impoverishes the US and makes China wealthier. And that is not a market outcome, it's a politically designed outcome.
/sarc off
1) Dude, unilateral free trade is still better for consumers. The alternative is to say "They levy taxes on consumers who buy imports, and that's not fair! I want the government to make me pay more taxes on imports! Then it will be fair!"
2) Are you really complaining about low prices? Seriously? If the Chinese government wants to use taxes to make exports less expensive, then that's great for us. The only thing our government can do to make up for it is to tax those artificially low priced goods to make them more expensive. You really want to be taxed more because China is treating its people unfairly?
3) That doesn't make any sense. Trade is between individuals, not nations.
/sarc on
(1) There is no such thing as "unilateral free trade". Trade is either free or it is not.
(2) Yes, I'm complaining about low prices. I object to the US government subsidizing consumer goods and/or imposing price controls, and I object to the Chinese government doing the same thing. That's because artificially lowering the price on some goods means that the money that should have been allocated to other goods is not allocated to those goods.
(3) First of all, when you are trading with China, you are not trading "with individuals", you are trading with entities controlled by the communist government. Those entities are using the US dollars they get from this trade to gain strategic and political power. And on the US side, massive consumer spending is subsidized by redistributionary policies of the US government, which themselves are financed by debt.
I get it: you are a typical, greedy American. You want to consume as cheaply as possible and you want the US government to make that happen. And you rationalize your greed and entitlement with the absurd claim that this is somehow a "free market" outcome.
The US has a couple of trillions of dollars in budget deficit every year. That is money that US consumers ought to pay in taxes but don't. That is what really finances the massive imports in consumer goods from China and elsewhere.
Heck, to take your point further we could be invaded any time by a number of nations around the world, and it's likely that we're economically dependent upon them in some way. They could take territory and cut off the spigot of some economic good that we need to survive!
Your Russian analogy is so apt. Best I've ever seen.
Do you think the US government should subsidize the purchase of consumer goods? Of course not, because that distorts the market and leads to overconsumption and underinvestment. But if the US imports goods from China, then the Chinese government subsidizing the purchase of consumer goods by Americans has the same harmful effects as the US subsidizing such purchases. That's one problem.
The second problem is that the Chinese aren't subsidizing these consumer good purchases out of their own pockets. Rather, they have an arrangement with the US whereby they are paid in debt and in capital investments.
So, not only does China engage in market-distorting subsidies of US consumer goods, Americans are paying for it and a premium on top of it.
But if the US imports goods from China, then the Chinese government subsidizing the purchase of consumer goods by Americans has the same harmful effects as the US subsidizing such purchases.
/sarc off
Absolutely not. The effect of China subsidizing exports is cheaper stuff for us. It's a benefit for us at the expense of Chinese taxpayers. Granted industry doesn't like it. Of course not. They can't compete. I say so what. If you want to base economic policy on the wants of industry, cars would be outlawed to keep buggy whip makers in business.
Even if Chinese taxpayers were paying for it, it would still distort the market and lead to misallocation of resources. That is, because Chinese goods are so cheap, the demand for them is higher, which means that money that would otherwise be invested into capital goods in the US is sent to China.
But Chinese taxpayers are not paying for it, Chinese workers are, many of them in slavery-like conditions. Of course, you probably don't give a f*ck about that as long as you get a cheap TV.
But on the US side, all that spending is paid for either; our budget deficit is a couple of trillion dollars and the bottom 60% pay almost no income tax, so excessive consumer spending in the US is financed by debt and by misallocating resources from capital goods to consumer goods. And that is a system that China has been encouraging and participating in, to the detriment of Americans.
US industry can't compete with China because (1) China uses slavery(-like) working conditions, and (2) because regulations and taxes have made the US uncompetitive. Again, this is government intervention, not a shortcoming of US industry. And China has been involved in creating this system in the US. That is the real "foreign interference" you ought to worry about.
But, hey, all greedy, entitled, ignorant Americans like you care about is getting the cheapest possible TVs, and you construct some absurd justification in terms of "free trade" to feel good about it.
A note regarding buggy whips:
The Amish, with a fertility rate of 7 children per woman, and a retentention rate of over 95% are currently the fastest-growing demographic in America.
Combine that with the fact that electric vehicle mandates in California and New York will destroy the used car market and create a situation where only the top quartile can afford to drive.
And maybe buggy whip manufacturers are a savvy investment!
Whips, yes, and stocks... the kind with openings for your neck and wrists.
The second problem is that the Chinese aren't subsidizing these consumer good purchases out of their own pockets. Rather, they have an arrangement with the US whereby they are paid in debt and in capital investments.
You'll have to elaborate. That doesn't make any sense to me.
/sarc on
There are several mechanism. One of them is this. The US government issues massive amounts of debt every year and uses the money as handouts to Americans to increase consumer spending. The US government does this because it makes American voters happy. Americans use that money to buy Chinese goods. The Chinese end up with a lot of US dollars. They use those dollars to buy US debt at favorable conditions to the US to continue the system.
(China also buys up the US industrial base and equities, which is one reason why it keeps disappearing.)
Problem with China is that it hasn't been "free" trading.
My best example is always the fact that the Yuan doesn't trade freely on the open market. It is only allowed to trade within a narrow range and they massively manipulate the offshore market (internal and external Yuan don't trade the same, internal being set by the government so one renminbi isn't always one renminbi) -- and, somehow, this is tolerated by the international trading community.
If China was genuinely seeing 25% economic growth year over year without manipulated currency, there would have been massive inflationary pressures that made them less of a bargain as a manufacturer. Yet, now, they're one of the largest economies in the world and still allowed to act like an "emerging market" economy, like they are some Caribbean island fresh off a coup or a volcano or some shit.
I could also whine about thing like how they subsidize internal shipping to take advantage of international postal treaties that require us to deliver ANY international mail, or how they handicap the west with CITES regulations as they overuse a resource, then when we can't get it anymore they ignore the CITES and just import it directly.
The west have been pussies in dealing with this shit since the 90s. They should have put a stop to a lot of this shit as far back as the Clinton administration.
We need to double down in ICE and fossil fuels. Anything else without a substantial change in technology is economic suicide.
Since the U.S. doesn't seem interested in enslaving African countries for mineral extraction
There's plenty of cobalt in Canada and Australia. Both of whom have mining operations in their country (gasp!)
I want that mine in my back yard. And nobody can be everybody without me.
“ Two decades later, things have not quite worked out the way many champions of free trade hoped at the end of President Bill Clinton's administration.”
Ok. Let’s here it.
“Neither China nor Russia turned into liberal, free market democracies.”
We don’t do free markets in order to manipulate other governments into adopting systems we like. We do it because it’s the best for everyone involved.
“Two decades of unending war have been peppered by financial crises, populist uprisings, and pandemics.”
Free markets didn’t start any wars, mishandle pandemics, mismanage the federal reserve.
“Russia's invasion of Ukraine and the ensuing sanctions are merely the latest shock to the system.”
And have nothing to do with free markets.
It's interesting how they admit we were doing this at least partially with the aim of cultural/political change.
But ignore that other nation's might try it with us.
Brian, The Kleptocracy pays your money to the DEA, AML, FATF, TF, CFT, DNFBP, IRS-CID, INL, ICRG, GIABA, GAFISUD, FSRB, FIU, FinCEN and EAG to send armed minions and political "advisors" to all points south of Brownsville. They do to those economies what the 18th Amendment, Volstead Act, Harrison Act, Manifesto Income Tax and asset forfeiture looting did to ours. Bad enough America has imported the fanatical prohibitionism that made China the slave pen it is now. To assist in reexporting such violent madness is actual terrorism hard at work.
"The idea that globalization enhances economic resilience is counterintuitive, especially as China seems to shut down its port facilities on a regular basis. So, consider the baby formula crisis that emerged this spring."
Yeah, consider it: Sure, our government blocking imports of baby formula didn't help. But the only reason blocking imports of baby formula could matter is that our government had already screwed up domestic supplies, which ordinarily would have been sufficient!
The quest for self-sufficiency is a quest to avoid suffering the consequences of others' mistakes. At the same time it leaves you more vulnerable to the consequences of your own mistakes.
The fundamental problem here isn't actually globalization or isolationism. It's that our government sucks. So long as that's the case, neither globalization nor isolationism can save us.
Socialists are the ultimate globalists.
As Douglas Murray once said, the left tends to want the same thing, everywhere, at the same time, and in the same order.
Their ideal is the Chinese army marching. Every step perfectly in sync, every head turned exactly the same way at the same time. Every mind thinking the same thought. The Borg are individualists by comparison.
Did you ever hear of a lemming saying "Hey guys! There's a cliff in front of us!"? No, and in the left's world of the future, no human will say that either.
Free trade between individuals in free countries is always good, but the problem is that trade is "negotiated" by governments, who by their nature, use restrictions and tariffs.
If you want a free trade zone, establish one between English speaking countries first. All of them have legal systems based on English common law. No tariffs, no subsidies and no
government to government trade deals, period. All trades are individual to individual, company to company.
After that, take on countries with relatively free economies like Sweden and the other Nordic countries. As more countries free up their economies, more can enter the free trade alliance.
Hey, how come the duck-grabbing article wasn’t this long?
Ducks are being abducted?
It's time to face reality and finally look away from fantasy and wishful thinking. Totally unrestricted open market free trade (that is specifically opening up and lowering safeguards for trade between first world and third world countries, to say nothing of dictatorships etc) is an utter and complete failure! Left us in the hands of our greatest threats and enemies (not to mention pretty much built their modern high tech police state and made them rich) Even worse, it has lead to the near destruction of western society and left it vulnerable to an even bigger failure, leftism/socialism/communism. Once seemingly beaten, it was allowed to make a comeback directly and indirectly because of current versions of open market ideology and current market "logic" in general.
It would be nice to have someone who produces something and trades in the economy write about this instead of professors that produce nothing
I saw who authored it and didn't bother to read it. Drezner is a useless academician who can't tell his ass from a hole in the ground. Did Reason actually pay for this?
Hear hear! Judge what someone says by the person, not what they say.
Get a grip. I didn't form my opinion of him without reading plenty of his crap over the years.
If you didn't live in a hole in the ground you would have known Drezner was a notorious Neocon warrior and 2008 bailout booster, sarcasmic.
We're judging him on things he already said.
Great point. Academics like Friedman, Hayek and Sowell have no real experience in producing stuff, so they've got no business talking about economics. Fuck those guys. Listen to industry. They know best.
Let’s not get the opinions of those that risk everything to build a business in private enterprise. Lets base all political policy on economic modeling assumptions, “Inflation is transitory” etc. Academics know best.
We do hear from Jim Caruso, our fave Beer Baron. Where else besides Reason have you seen this successful objectivist entrepreneur even mentioned, much less heard out?
To some this may seem like a well reasoned and thoughtful piece but like like most exercises in abstract thought it lacks context.
As a Hispanic immigrant I can contribute a touch of reality to counter this professor’s viewpoint. As a young man I held a job as a ramp agent at a major airport. While the ramp agents working for the airlines were making $12-15/hr, we (immigrants mostly) were making $4/hr working for a contract firm. It was a dangerous job with plenty of opportunities to get maimed or killed. And yes, both type of incidents occurred while I worked there. In spite of the dangers inherent to the job, we were still forced to work long hours. On a few occasions during the holidays I personally worked over 24 hours straight. Is this one of the benefits of open immigration? To have unlimited capacity and throw as many headcount at demand as the “free market” can tolerate regardless of wages?
The other side of the issue I witnessed was the extremely rapid decline in wages that took place in the local economy after the wave of immigration of which I was part. Friends would walk into businesses, point at a help wanted sign and inform the manager that they would do it for half what they were paying. It was very common to get hired on the spot.
We’re the immigrants at fault? No, they were just trying to survive. Am I against immigration? Hell no, our culture and society would be much poorer without the energy and innovation that immigrants bring. Not to mention the incredible food and talents they bring with them. But immigration should be managed and regulated if we are to preserve the way of life that attracts so many across the globe.
BTW, according to the Univstats Web site the average salary for a professor at Tufts is $156,975.
zzzzzzz...
Call me when you want to talk about DOMESTIC free-trade....
Part of my becoming a libertarian was Poul Anderson's Polesotechnic League stories, in which free trade basically magically made every things better - hostile civilizations would be forced to be peaceful because it's citizens liked cheaper (or different) goods.
But the reality is, free trade doesn't export freedom, it imports and enables totalitarian regimes. At least it has for China.
And the Russian invasion of Ukraine has exposed other problems. Firstly, Europe now is screwed energy wise, because they can't import from Russia anymore. And for the Russians, they can't make new gear because they have difficulty getting parts. And a lot of their gear is just crap, like their tires because they bought the cheapest products possible from China and they didn't hold up very well.
What do you expect? A handful of California edible gummies or Mexican buttons will get you flung into a Texas prison. Meanwhile shiploads of Red Chinese slave products are unloaded at Houston and Corpus harbors. American tariff laws used to encourage interstate commerce and forbid slave and convict labor imports. The Kleptocracy has changed all that for the time being.
Ha ha ha. Ooops. I mean... that's a shame. Poor Yurup, poor Yourupeens... Even the Swiss have been gulled into turning off reactors. Ha ha ha... Ooops...
Globalism is one man going from ten cents to ten billion; another goes from ten cents to thirty cents and is told, 'Why are you complaining? I've tripled your net worth. Now turn in your guns and get back to work!"
When everything is political, everything is a weapon. There, I could have saved that author from writing that long, rambling collection of rationalizations.
Free trade is ideal between free nations. There simply aren’t many of those, and this country fell to “rule by bureaucrats” decades ago.
Much struggle goes into evading fact that These States are an island of freedom in a sea of mystical monarchies and collectivist cannibalism. Populist anarcho-fascism spreads like a disease among dropouts competent in no first language (forget a second) and unwelcome to even apply for a visa to see firsthand beyond our Constitutional borders. What is out there is coercion, want and poverty nurtured by prohibition of production and trade gleefully exported by Kleptocracy politicians here.
Daniel never notices that the 6.1 billion population of 2000 has meanwhile increased to 8 billion persons. The 2B change equals half the people living on Earth up to 1970 when fanaticism again sought to ban birth control and convert the female half of the population into breeder dams. In tandem with this, totalitarian collectivists have moved mountains in persistent efforts to stop us from generating the electricity needed to sustain that many human lives in an industrial society. "Populist" in his essay means uneducated, impoverished rednecks of the sort that voted for Bryan over a century ago. Only now the poverty is deliberately worsened by strangling electrical generation.
free trade excuses neither slavery nor Communism
1. What has happened over the last 30 years is that the US trade deficit has exploded, and GDP growth has stagnated. US GDP has languished at 2% annual growth since the end of the recession in 2009. You cannot call it a "win" from a macro-economic standpoint without lying.
2. Immigration is not a strictly economic issue, and cannot be treated as such.
3. Reagan was a far more "populist" president than Trump. That term is being misused and turned into a bogeyman for misdirection.
It is absolutely clear what has actually happened over the last 30 years - policy has been aimed almost exclusively at providing cheap foreign labor to employers, through outsourcing and immigration. The only other use of trade policy has been to use unilateral disarmament (i.e. trade deals that are bad for the US) to achieve geopolitical goals. That is the primary cause of the expanding income gaps, declining middle class, and increased political and social disintegration in the US. The promised benefits to Americans have not materialized. It has been a net loss, and it is destabilizing the country.
Given all of that, let me offer a level-headed, moderate response to the problem: US trade policy should be aimed at eliminating trade deficits, and immigration law should be enforced. There is no need for blanket "protectionism", but rather a reciprocal approach based on the other party's own policy. If country X has a tariff, we mirror it in our deal with them. We no longer aim to "set an example" by giving away terms unfavorable to the US.
This is an entirely reasonable approach that should be expected of any government, and that is practiced by virtually every other government in the world. Don't make trade deals that produce losses. And with regard to immigration, simply enforce the law. That's not radical. What's radical is that we have had "leaders" from bother parties over the last 30 years who have defiantly refused to fulfill their obligations to serve the American people.
Goodby to Globalism ..... and good riddance.
Hear me out before you freak out.
Health and Safety standards, Environmental regulations, Food Safety standards and Social Safety nets all have one thing in common. They cost money. Collectively, LOTS of money. ALL of those costs get imbedded into the price of goods produced IN THE USA.
The primary effect of "Free Trade" (that has not at any point been reciprocal) is the export of manufacturing to the MOST ABUSIVE nation. Move chemicals and heavy industry to places with little to no environmental standards. Move heavy industry and heavy manufacturing to places with no safety standards. And the same applies to everything from health to child labor.
It does not matter how "good" or "nationalistic" you are. Every company ultimately becomes faced with the necessity to export manufacturing in order to compete.
This is a disaster for providing jobs and futures to those who are not in the professional class, not to mention the national security implications and the fragility of supply chains (as proved in the last couple of years).
It is long past time to recognize that "free trade" is part of our national heritage. But, the founding fathers were interested in having it WITHIN the USA, as demonstrated in the commerce clause. They understood, as we should understand, that "free trade" between nations with different standards, different cultures, and different legal schemes is a losers game for the USA.
The world is not a single government with a unified approach to safety, environment, and social policy. The full-on Globalists want it to be, with all the centralized power that entails. The true irony of libertarian "free trade" is that it has been drawing us not toward global liberalism, but rather toward global centralization and tyranny.
So yes, good-by to Globalization ... and good riddance indeed.