By John Tamny on 3.29.07 @ 12:07AM
Angst about global economic pressures will not keep America prosperous.
Princeton University's Alan Blinder wrote in 2001, "Like 99% of
economists since the days of Adam Smith, I am a free trader down to
my toes." According to a front page article by the Wall Street
Journal's David Wessel and Bob Davis yesterday, Blinder
"remains an implacable opponent of tariffs and trade barriers," but
now worries loudly "that a new industrial revolution --
communication technology that allows services to be delivered
electronically from afar -- will put as many as 40 million American
jobs at risk of being shipped out of the country in the next decade
or two."
Owing to his aversion to tariffs and trade barriers, Blinder is
not advocating protectionist measures. He is, however, seeking
greater and more tax-advantaged efforts by U.S. firms to create the
kinds of jobs that can't be outsourced, along with more expansive
government programs "for displaced workers than the few months of
training it offers today." Unfortunately, Blinder's advocacy of
more government involvement in the jobs sector and "tailored"
employment supposedly not effected by developments in the world
economy works at cross purposes with his desire to improve the lot
of American workers.
As Blinder no doubt knows, the surplus of any good, be it boxed
or sent electronically from overseas, creates new wants among
people. To the extent that U.S. firms send work to India or China
to be done more cheaply, the lower cost associated with the move
frees up capital for new investment by businesses stateside. The
lower cost of goods and services also accrues to consumers in such
a way that they have capital beyond life's daily necessities, and
through savings, help to fund the formation of new companies that
will create jobs in place of those lost.
As a free trader, Blinder also surely knows that the quickest
way for a country to impoverish itself is to engage in labor that
could be done more cheaply elsewhere. Indeed, labor is wasted when
it is geared toward something that others can do.
Without profit, there is no investment, and if we seek to
manipulate the tax code to create jobs that are hard to outsource
as opposed to those that most profitably exploit our talents, we'll
be poorer for the outflow of capital from the United States. If
anything, we should embrace the flow of jobs overseas for the
market signal that wages here are rising, not to mention that
businesses here are accessing the global labor force to maximize
profits. The latter act will attract the very capital that will
fund the creation of new work opportunities.
On the education front, Blinder's desire to retool education in
such a way that Americans will access jobs that are not
"outsourceable" is both undesirable for workers and impossible on
its face. It's undesirable for the simple reason that jobs free of
competitive stress breed indolence. And if jobs are created for
their stationary attributes rather than for their economic value,
wages will reflect this reality.
The undesirable harm to businesses will be twofold, given the
loss of investment that will result from underutilization of labor,
and lost profitability opportunities due to limited access to
overseas labor. Businesses don't exist for the workers, and instead
exist for shareholders. What Blinder wants is certainly unrealistic
given capital's prejudice in favor of the most profitable
investment opportunities.
Blinder's desire is impossible for the simple reason that no one
can know what skills businesses will and will not need in the
future. Specifically, he calls for more in the way of civil
engineers "who have to be on site," but if the markets are not
demanding that kind of work, how are we helping the American
worker? In the 1970s, the Soviet Union was turning out ten times
the number of engineers as the United States, but this fact in no
way delayed its eventual demise. Successful businesses are that way
for meeting previously unmet and unknown needs. To assume that
governments somehow possess an insider's knowledge allowing them to
divine the proper training necessary for the work of the future is
the height of folly.
Lastly, there will be higher costs associated with extra
government training that will require capital to be redeployed from
the private sector into the government domain. Since it is private
capital that creates jobs, a solution that involves more government
spending seems inimical to the needs of outsourced workers, not to
mention those still employed who must pay for it.
In the end, it has to be remembered that as the only closed
economy is the world economy, economic advances benefit us all.
Rather than run from the growing pools of labor around the world,
we should embrace their work efforts knowing full well that they'll
accrue to our standing of living, all the while maximizing the
value of the work we seek here.
topics:
Education, Trade, Business