Does World Trade Need World Government?

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A good piece by Lew Rockwell on the odd dichotomy of the world's governments hosting summits on the concept of "free" trade. Global trade is one issue on which politicians form the left, right and center seem utterly unable to view with any sort of clarity or intelligence -- but even if they can see things with perfect lucidity, they will never admit to it, because the only course to a truly free trading society is laissez-faire capitalism, which will never happen on a global level (except in the black market and undergound economies, where it thrives precisely because of the interference by the state in "legitimate" markets.)

Phaedrus

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
Does World Trade Need World Government?
by Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Mises.org



This much we know: prosperous nations have the fewest barriers to trade, while poor nations have the most. That fact alone does not prove the case for free trade, but adding a bit of logic sews up the case. The wider the pool from which a country can draw labor and capital, the more likely it is that resources will be used efficiently and to the betterment of all. By opening up an economy beyond the borders of the nation-state, the workers and capital resources of a country find the best possible employments toward the goal of serving society as a whole.

The case for free trade has been made for hundreds of years, and yet the fight for the right to buy and sell outside the borders is never ending. The situation is complicated by a major confusion that exists among free trade advocates. Many believe that world trade, because it is a good thing, ought to be sanctioned, managed, and otherwise regulated by the government or a coalition of governments. Thus was the intellectual error behind the creation of the World Trade Organization, an international bureaucracy that was supposed to open up trade but has ended up politicizing it and creating international conflict where none need exist.

Consider the crazy, mixed-up politics at work at the trade talks in Cancun, Mexico. The rich nations (meaning, mainly, the US) swaggered into Cancun with an aggressive, three-pronged agenda: to foist a stricter system of investment rules (including patent and copyright enforcement) on developing nations, to extend US-style environmental and labor regulations to cover poorer nations, and to reduce restrictions on exports to poor nations and foreign investment in them from the industrialized world. What was missing here was the good will to make a change in their own protectionist policies, much less to reduce the production supports for their own inefficient industries.

Trade was certainly on the agenda, but free trade as traditionally understood was nowhere in the mix. From the beginning, the WTO was based on the idea that industrialized nations need to find markets for their products among the sad-sack nations of the world—not that the poor nations might have something to sell that consumers in rich nations might want to buy. That's why "intellectual property rights" (coercive monopolies for particular producers in rich countries) was high on the agenda but real-life free trade in agricultural goods was off the table completely.

Nor are the rich nations a monolith. Because the US has long been the driving force behind global economic growth, US officials naturally assume that they have the right to exercise hegemonic control over the world economy, an assumption which makes EU finance ministers (embroiled in their own harmonization controversies) very wary indeed. This follows several years of unrelieved protectionist regulation by the US against anyone anywhere who would dare build a better mousetrap than is produced in the land of the free (which just so happens to be host to the largest, best-armed, most well-funded government in the history of the world).

Meanwhile, poor nations arrived in Cancun with a history of bad experiences at world trade conferences. The last time around, finance ministers from rich nations made some perfunctory promises to address the agricultural question, but moved on to preach to poor nations that they had better shape up and start regulating their economies more heavily. In particular, they were told that they need to crack down on alleged copyright and patent abuses in their countries, raise wages so that their workers can't "unfairly" compete with those from industrialized nations, and start enforcing stricter environmental laws. This is a composite agenda cobbled together by the main labor, environmental, and business interests that are so influential in US politics.

Now, the problem here is obvious to anyone who knows basic economics. The comparative advantage that poor nations have in attracting investment and producing their own goods for export is precisely their unregulated labor and environmental regimes. Given that their object is to become more competitive, not less, it would make no sense to legislate higher wages that would only drive out capital and lead to more unemployment. If they stand a chance for development, tighter regulations on production are not the answer. What they need instead is an open marketplace in which to compete using their comparative advantage.

In the past, the anti-WTO protestors have claimed to be standing with the poor nations of the world against capitalist globalization, but the reality is much more complicated. By resisting the trend to "upwardly harmonize" regulations, poor nations of the world have stood firmly with the free-trade tradition. What they were arguing for, in reality, is not less globalization in general but less political globalization in order to make possible more economic globalization. The two forces are at odds with each other.

Having been burned too many times in the past, this time, poor nations arrived at the talks with a set of demands of their own. If the rich countries are going to preach about "free trade," they'd best start living up to it themselves. That rich countries export highly subsidized farm products to the third world, to sell at prices cheaper than these countries can produce, is notable enough. But to then turn around and refuse to accept imports of low-priced goods on grounds that this constitutes "dumping," is adding injury to insult.

At the talks, each side tried to change the subject as much as possible until it became obvious that there was little point in talking. The legal and regulatory reforms that the US demanded were never seriously considered. The idea of cuts in subsidies and tariffs was ruled out completely. Indeed, the Bush administration is moving in the opposite direction, toward the dangerous idea of national sufficiency, even though it is a sure prescription for economic depression. Of course the whole scene was punctuated by hysterical protests from the throngs of activists that the WTO attracts like flies to a picnic.

As for the leftists who railed against globalization, they are right to have an inchoate sense that the WTO is up to no good. Beyond that, there is no agreement. If they are in solidarity with the poor nations of the world, does that mean they favor cutting agricultural subsidies in industrialized nations? That would mean job losses of course, and further hardship for their beloved "family farms." You can't stand with both the poor and oppressed agricultural workers in the US and the poor and oppressed agricultural workers in the third world; ultimately they are in competition with each other, and should be.

What's more, the left can't simultaneously endorse the full panoply of phony and expensive "rights" in the charter of the International Labor Organization and link arms with the workers of the third world. The bottom line is that if the US labor unions get their way, the workers and peasants in the third world would find themselves without jobs and even more destitute than they already are. The same goes for foreign investment, which, contrary to the left, is a boon for all poor nations.

As for the business lobby, it needs to worry less about forcing foreign governments to enforce their copyrights and think more about how to compete in an increasingly competitive world. It ought to spend at least as much time and energy reducing barriers to imports as it does pushing for the elimination of barriers to exports. In short, they need to stop acting so much like mercantilists and act more like entrepreneurs.

The irony is that the WTO bears much of the blame, though there is plenty to go around. Somehow world trade proceeded apace for the entire history of civilization without this outfit serving as a sounding board for fanatics, protectionists, and would-be global regulators. When so many free traders supported the WTO's creation, were they being naïve or were they being paid off? Regardless, the WTO is no friend of free trade.

Everyone says that the collapse in Cancun could mean the end of multilateral trade negotiations for the duration. For the cause of free trade, there could be a downside to this, especially if it means that the US will treat the issue of world trade with as much political finesse as it managed the Iraq situation.

But the upside is even more obvious. It means a setback in the movement to upwardly harmonize regulations. It means a setback for global government generally. It is all to the good if it means that businesses around the world work on striking up their own deals instead of relying on governments, and the organizations that governments create, to do it for them.

As a side benefit, it is now exposed for all to see, and possibly for the first time in our generation, that industrialized nations represent a great threat to free trade. What is needed is not another round of negotiations. Let every nation, right now, do what is best for all citizens of the world: eliminate every form of intervention that would prevent or otherwise hobble mutually beneficial trade between any two parties anywhere in the world. No bureaucracy can help us toward that goal; it must come from a growing realization of the merit of freedom itself.
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And this is just the kind of garbage that the state's interference in free trade produces ...

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Time Running Out For US To Prevent EU Trade Sanctions
by Ulrika Lomas
Tax News


Brussels, 30 September 2003

The European Commission reminded the United States government last Friday that time is running out for Congress to repeal the Extra Territorial Income Exclusion Act (ruled illegal by the World Trade Organisation) before the EU imposes retaliatory tariffs on US imports.

According to Reuters, Arancha Gonzalez, spokeswoman for EU Trade Commissioner Pascal Lamy, commented that the "Congressional process has to be completed" to avert a potential trans-Atlantic trade war.

Earlier in the year the European Union gave Congress until the autumn to make progress in replacing the offending piece of legislation, which gives subsidies to US export-oriented firms such as Microsoft and Boeing. Should the EU deem that insufficient progress is being made in the US legislature, then it has warned that it could impose up to $4 billion worth of punitive tariffs on a range of US goods from January 1 next year.

A number of bills are currently being debated by US lawmakers which will replace the present system, the most popular of which will use the revenue saved from repealing the Foreign Sales Corporation tax law to fund a cut in corporation tax for US manufacturing firms.
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Contrary to popular notion, the United States does not actually engage in any trade with the European Union -- there are American companies who sell to customers/clients in the EU, and vice versa. All the respective governments bring to the equation is a means to make everything twice as expensive to do, and several more useless positions in Washington for several more useless persons.


Phaedrus
 

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In case you were wondering, no we never did manage to get that bit worked out ...

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
EU Turns Up The Heat On US As Tariffs Rise To 6%
by Ulrika Lomas
Tax-News.com

The European Union is maintaining pressure on the United States to drop tax breaks banned by the WTO, sticking to its promise to raise import duties on selected US products by 1% per month.

Accordingly, tariffs on US imports increased last Thursday from 5% to 6%, a move confirmed by EU Commission trade spokeswoman Arancha Gonzalez.

"Tariffs are being raised by one percent today as planned and this is not an April fools joke," she announced, continuing: "We hope that by this time next month we can announce that trade sanctions are lifted."

Should the United States fail to remove the offending legislation, the Extra Territorial Income Exclusion Act, the extra duties will reach $315 million by the end of the year, rising to $666 million if a solution is not found by the end of 2005.

Whilst the World Trade Organisation has given the EU the right to impose $4 billion worth of sanctions upon the United States, the European Commission has chosen a less draconian approach, no doubt aware that such punitive sanctions would also adversely affect European firms by increasing prices and costs.

It had been hoped by many US lawmakers that alternative legislation sponsored by the Senate Finance Committee Chairman Charles Grassley, known as the JOBS Bill, would be ready for passage into law before the EU sanctions began to bite.

However, the bill recently stalled on the Senate floor after Democrats tried to attach an unrelated amendment concerning overtime rules, leaving its future somewhat uncertain.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>


Phaedrus
 

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Heavy reading day, I see.

Unless and until the WTO limits itself to issues related to the dismantling of trade barriers like tarrifs and subsidies, the poor countries will never enjoy the level of growth found in industrialised nations. The WTO needs to stop pandering to corporate private interests and get back to the business it was constructed to do.

Of course, once it does so, it will fall prey to that new great American tradition of being deemed 'irrelevant.'

(Globalisation is one of those rare topics within which the true left and true right can wholeheartedly agree -- of course their reasons may be completely different, but the outcomes would satisfy both.)
 

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posted by xpanda:
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
Heavy reading day, I see.
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LOL. Every day is a heavy reading day; just not always a heavy posting day. I post maybe 2-3% of the news/commentary articles that I read in a given day.

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
Unless and until the WTO limits itself to issues related to the dismantling of trade barriers like tarrifs and subsidies, the poor countries will never enjoy the level of growth found in industrialised nations. The WTO needs to stop pandering to corporate private interests and get back to the business it was constructed to do.
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

I have no idea what this means. The WTO, like the rest of the UN, needs to be shuttered and burned, preferably with all of its employees shackled nude in the building at the time.

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
Of course, once it does so, it will fall prey to that new great American tradition of being deemed 'irrelevant.'
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Grasping, but I assume you're referring to Secretary Powell's absurd admonition to the UN that it risked irrelevance if it didn't authorise military action against Iraq. Seeing as how that didn't pan out, and strategically speaking we can't really wage a "war of liberation" on the entire UN, I don't think the WTO will have a problem any time soon.

Besides, we're just as happy to go running crying to the WTO when we want a favour, just like the rest of the world does.

There's actually an interesting and nauseating story behond the current EU tarriffs. Our one devent politician, Ron Paul, warned of this exact scenario unfolding years ago. As usual, nobody listend to Congressman Paul; as usual, he turned out to be right; as usual, no one is mentioning to him even in passing. It makes me wonder why he doesn't just quit and go back to having a real job.

<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
(Globalisation is one of those rare topics within which the true left and true right can wholeheartedly agree -- of course their reasons may be completely different, but the outcomes would satisfy both.)
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

Globalisation is not something on which the right and left agree; it's an illusion. Globalisation is a made-up hobgoblin that whomever is opposed to it feels free to apply whatever definition is expedient -- free trade, trade barriers, GM crops, foreign aid, foreign loans, lack of foreign loans, tax harmonisation, tax competition, you name it, it can all be found at some point or another being decried as an exmaple of globalisation.

It's just one more Quixotic windmill for angry people to joust, like drugs, terrorism, money laundering, child pornography, etc. No one knows exactly how to define it, and the people being paid to "do something about it" have a vested interest in the problem never going away.


Phaedrus
 

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I agree wholeheartedly that the left and the right do not explicitly agree on this subject ... I said that the 'true' left and the 'true' right 'can' agree ... the left should be thrilled at the opportunities for the impoverished while the right should be thrilled with the access to cheaper labour and new markets.

And I don't know if it's intentional or not, but you're writing like we internationals. 'Favour' and 'globalisation.' Careful, or Kman won't take you seriously anymore.
 

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posted by xpanda:
<BLOCKQUOTE class="ip-ubbcode-quote"><font size="-1">quote:</font><HR>
And I don't know if it's intentional or not, but you're writing like we internationals. 'Favour' and 'globalisation.'
<HR></BLOCKQUOTE>

K, well actually, it's how I write and always have, due to my "international" upbringing.


Phaedrus
 

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After reading the article thoroughly I want to stress out that I am currently studying the subject of Free Trade especially CAFTA (Central American Free Trade Agreement) and it is a common fact that it possesses many advantages for Costa Rica consisting on the following:

Telecommunications Industry:

Currently the Costa Rican government has a monopoly over the telecommunication sector and a little company called ICE (Instituto Costarricense Electricidad) whom provides completely inadequate service with Internet, Cell Phone, Phone Installation, Constant Blackouts, A Tremendous bureaucracy, and a large percentage of very lazy useless employees. ICE does have its advantages where they would repair transformers in any sector of Costa Rica and work to provide electricity to all areas of Costa Rica.

Since this company is owned by the government than they are not as motivated to upgrade their services due to lack of competition. Under CAFTA Costar Rican citizens will be provided the opportunity to have a variety of North American Companies to choose from, and superior service. ICE will simply have to accept the fact that they will now be competing against other companies. Finally, this will also provide new jobs for Costa Ricans with the arrival of new telecommunication companies.

Insurance and Healthcare:

This also is under a government monopoly and provides an extremely valuable nationwide Healthcare system to all Costa Ricans (superior to the US). What will occur is that there will be an arrival of new insurance companies and the Costa Rican consumer will be provided with the opportunity to select the Insurance coverage of their liking. Nevertheless, Costa Rican Health Care (CCSS Caja Costarricense de Seguro Social) will never go bankrupt and will continue to provide the same service to all Costa Ricans.

Intellectual Property and Generic Medicine:

Currently, the Costa Rican Health Care Hospital (CCSS) on a yearly basis purchases extremely large sums of medicine to several companies including pharmaceutical firms whom copy the formula from North American Medical Firms. The CCSS goes through a bidding process usually going to the lowest bidder and it always tends to be these types of Generic Companies. For US pharmaceutical firms whom invest millions and millions of dollars throughout years of research, it just doesn’t seem fair that a company comes along violating their Intellectual Patent. It is a common fact that the CCSS saves a tremendous amount of money purchasing with these generic firms yet once CAFTA takes into effect the CCSS will continue to go to the lowest bidder except that they are all legitimate companies. Not only that, but it will in no way raise the healthcare cost for the common Costa Rican.

Agricultural:

A very large percentage of Costa Rican agricultural and beef products will be able to export their goods to the United States having $0 tariffs providing great opportunities to Costa Rican Farmers. Nevertheless, a very small percentage of Farmers will not receive these benefits and though very sad, the percentage is much larger for the beneficiaries. With this agreement, both the middle, lower middle, and upper middle class Farmers will benefit.

Truly there are much more pros than cons in this agreement.
 

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I haven't done any detailed analysis of CAFTA, but any time a government document contains the words "free trade" in it -- espeially one which is a referendum between multiple nations -- it very seldom has anything to do with freedom of trade. It's just one of the many misused words by government, like "enemy combatant" and "deregulation." Granted, there will generally be some benefit to nations to come out of a given peaceably-arrived-at piece of legislation, but to credit the states for remoing barriers to trade that never should have been there in the first place is like giving a spree rapist a gold star when he finally stops.


Phaedrus
 

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