Trade, outsourcing and tariffs top '08 concerns
Where John McCain and Barack Obama stand on globalization
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This election cycle, msnbc.com is presenting a weekly series assessing issues and controversies that the next president will confront.
This week, we examine the benefits and harm caused by increased American trade with China, Mexico and other countries.
Why it's a problem
In 1993, Ross Perot warned against the “giant sucking sound” of American jobs being outsourced overseas.
His criticism was focused on the North American Free Trade Agreement between the U.S., Canada and Mexico — a deal that would take effect the next year.
Al Gore, vice president at the time, teasingly responded by giving Perot a photograph to hang on his office wall.
The photo was of Reed Smoot and Willis Hawley. Their protectionist Smoot-Hawley tariff has long been criticized by historians for further isolating the United States during the Great Depression.
Sixteen years after the Perot-Gore debate, economists generally agree that free trade has benefited the American economy, while labor unions insist that it's cost Americans jobs and led to global worker exploitation.
In a 2006 study, the Economic Policy Institute reported that NAFTA had cost the United States roughly 1 million jobs. The EPI is a non-profit organization that is partly funded by labor unions and focuses its research on the effect of trade on American workers.
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Some voters, particularly in Pennsylvania, Michigan, and other manufacturing states, frequently cite the connection between imported goods and the disappearance of manufacturing jobs in their states.
In a poll conducted last month by the Pew Research Center, 80 percent of respondents said that the global economy has influence over the U.S. economy.
Of those who thought it did, 63 percent said it was negative.
The political tide seems to be running against those who want to lower trade barriers.
In 2006, voters ousted 37 free trade proponents in Congress, and thus helped the Democrats’ win control of both chambers for the first time since NAFTA's passage.
The benefits of lowering trade barriers
But voters may be misreading their own self interest when they vote against those who promote more international trade.
Increased trade has benefited Americans through lower prices for consumer goods, better product choices, and higher incomes for workers employed by export-oriented firms, according to Gary Hufbauer and Paul Grieco of the Peterson Institute, a international economics think tank.
Those benefits, they argue in a Washington Post op-ed, are vast, but spread out amongst all American consumers — so, they may be harder to appreciate.
Workers hurt by low-wage competition exist in smaller, concentrated groups. But their plights are often more vivid and highly publicized.
And John Frisbie, president of the U.S.-China Business Council, said the EPI study claiming jobs lost due to trade with China is flawed. It “assumes that every product imported from China would have been made in the United States otherwise,” Frisbie said.
“Much of what we import from China is replacing imports from other countries, not products we make in the United States today,” he said.
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Where the candidates stand
Sen. John McCain, a self-described “unapologetic supporter of NAFTA,” has been a proponent of free trade.
“The biggest problem is not so much what’s happened with free trade, but our inability to adjust to a new world economy,” McCain told voters at an April campaign event in Ohio.
According to his campaign Web site, McCain would “overhaul unemployment insurance and make it a program for retraining, relocating and assisting workers who have lost a job.”
The Arizona senator has been a vocal supporter of the free trade agreement with Colombia that has been stalled in Congress.
Before traveling to Mexico and Colombia in July, McCain said he realized that, given America's economic downtown, it would be hard to sell voters on yet another free trade deal.
“I have to convince them the consequences of protectionism and isolationism could be damaging to their future,” McCain said.
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The Illinois senator has supported trade deals with Peru and Oman.
But he opposes the Colombia Free Trade Agreement and the Central American Free Trade Agreement that extended free trade to the Dominican Republic and a other Central American countries in 2005.
He has also said that he would consider renegotiating NAFTA to include tighter environmental and labor standards.
Yet, in September of 2007, Obama said, “I believe that America’s free market has been the engine of America’s great progress.”
And despite voting against CAFTA, Obama wrote in his most recent book that, “CAFTA was probably a net plus for the U.S. economy.”
Some of Obama’s key supporters are union members, who are strong advocates of overhauling the country’s trade policy to level the playing field for U.S. industries.
In Michigan, for example, Obama recently named the former head of political campaigns for the AFL-CIO as the head of his campaign in that state.
His candidacy has been endorsed by many labor groups, including the Service Employees International Union, the Teamsters union, and the AFL-CIO. But he is also being advised by economists known for their free trade stance, including former Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin.
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