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The Public Policy

A Weak Call for World Trade

The Obama administration puts up another roadblock to economic recovery.

President Obama recently recognized this week, May 16-22, to be World Trade Week. Despite this supposed display of support, Congress and President Obama have repeatedly refused opportunities to advance trade legislation. Three pending Free Trade Agreements (FTAs) — particularly one with Colombia (CFTA) — is costing U.S. consumers and businesses billions in lost opportunities.

The U.S. International Trade Commission estimates that the CFTA would increase U.S. GDP by $2.5 billion. Exports to Colombia would increase by $1.1 billion if tariffs — ranging from 10 to 35 percent per good — were lifted. And this trade agreement would do just that. On the import side, 90 percent of Colombian goods already enter the United States without any tariffs. Imports from Colombia are projected to increase by $487 million annually if the agreement is approved.

Economists from across the political spectrum have argued that reducing trade barriers is one of the most effective ways to spark economic growth. The Copenhagen Consensus, a Danish think tank, argues that completing the World Trade Organization’s Doha Round of trade talks could boost growth in the world’s poorest countries by 1.4 percent per year.

The Colombia FTA is a small but important piece of that puzzle. It is also low-hanging fruit. Negotiations were completed three years ago. All that’s left are votes by the House and Senate. Congress needs to pluck this fruit to help the economy get going again.

These agreements are not perfect. They contain a number of trade-unrelated provisions, mainly labor and environmental standards. But the benefits of increased trade are huge.

Henry Ford’s assembly lines, where each worker had a specialized task, produced more cars more cheaply than his competitors, which had little to no such specialization. What Henry Ford did was apply Adam Smith’s theory of division of labor to the factory floor.

The finer the division of labor, the more specialized workers can be. That’s how productivity increases and countries grow rich. The division of labor is limited to the extent of the market. Barriers to international trade keep markets artificially small and limit worker productivity.

All this is old hat to economists. But the general public is ambivalent on trade. Polls show a wide gap between economists and the public on trade issues.

A common objection non-economists have to freer trade is that they think it ships jobs overseas. Such people are at a loss to explain why more than 20 million net jobs have been created in the U.S. since NAFTA passed. Trade doesn’t affect the number of jobs. It affects the types of jobs. Trade allows each person to create more wealth than each could create on his own.

The AFL-CIO cites violence against union members as a reason for opposing the CFTA. While Colombia has a high (but decreasing) murder rate, union members are in no more danger than the general population. Around two percent of Colombians are union members; they comprised less than 0.5 percent of the 17,000 murder victims in 2007. They are actually about four times safer than the general population.

 This violence is tragic. But restricting access to trade will do absolutely nothing to decrease it. If anything, trade restrictions make violence worse since they keep people in poverty.

One cannot help but wonder if American labor leaders are exploiting the violence in Colombia as a means of hiding from competition.

Meanwhile, Colombia has been busy passing FTAs with other countries — Canada, Argentina, and parts of Europe. Imports to Colombia from those countries have soared at the expense of U.S. exports and workers. The longer we delay in passing this agreement, the more difficult it will be for U.S. businesses to regain those markets lost to other countries.

U.S. Trade Representative Kirk and President Obama need to press Congress to liberalize trade with Colombia. Similar agreements with South Korea and Panama also deserve to be passed. There are long-term consequences to holding America back from the benefits of freer trade. The world is moving forward in globalized trade relations; the United States cannot afford to be left behind.

About the Author

Geoffrey Michener is a research associate at the Competitive Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C.

About the Author

Brian McGraw is a policy analyst with the Center for Energy & Environment at the Competitive Enterprise Institute and writes for CEI’s newest blog, ResourcefulEarth.org.

Letter to the Editor View all comments (70) |

Ken (Old Texican)| 5.20.10 @ 1:07PM

Folks,
Does anyone remember "Smoot Hawley", the anti world trade law that crashed the whole world economy in the 30s ?

You can start the "endless stew" when starving, by starting with Dinty Moore Beef stew. Add lots of water, then start throwing in squirrel legs, song- bird-breasts, frog-legs, crawfish, fish-fish, potatoes, rice, wheat kernels day to day as aavailable. (heh, as shot or caught.)
Throw in some wheat-sprouts or bean- sprouts for vitamin content.

Oldefarte| 5.23.10 @ 3:21PM

The Obama administration does not care about FTA's, and their only agenda is protection of organized labor's restriction of employment to only those carrying an AFL-CIO card. Moreover, their anti-business [and therefore anti-employment] can be seen in the so-termned FINANCIAL REFORM LEGISLATION [which conveniently for them leaves untouched Fannie and Freddie so that same can continue promoting/providing their AFFORDABLE HOME WELFARE schemes to their indigent constituents], OBAMACARE [which extends WELFARE and WEALTH REIDSTRIBUTION], and next up, IMMIGRATION REFORM [will allows for the floodgates of illegals into this country to pad their Democrat Party coffers/enrollments] and CAP & TAX [which redistrubutes income through increased utility bills from THOSE WITH INCOME to THOSE WITHOUT INCOME]!!!!

jkdk| 7.1.10 @ 3:22AM

beijing massage

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