Globalization
Fails to Deliver the Goods
By Mark Weisbrot
One of the good things about the stock market coming
back down to Earth after a prolonged bubble is that
it leads people to question other misconceptions about
the economy. When stock prices were soaring we heard
all kinds of nonsense about a "new economy,"
technological revolutions, and profit projections
that were just too miraculous to be true.
The standard litany about the wonders
of globalization could be the next myth that is ripe
for debunking. For decades we have been told that
increasing global trade and investment was great for
everyone, with the exception of some inevitable "losers"
who would hopefully retrain for new jobs (perhaps
in the "new economy.")
Like the investment advisers who
hawked Enron and WorldCom stocks as they were heading
toward disaster, most of the "experts" on
globalization have long been avoiding the real numbers.
For starters: the real median wage
in 1973 was $12.45 (measured in 2000 dollars). In
2000 it was about $12.90. Considering that the US
economy grew by 72 percent (per person) during that
period, somebody got shafted. Since the median is
by definition the middle of the wage ladder, that
somebody includes the majority of employees in the
United States -- not just the textile or steel workers
who have been hit directly by foreign competition.
Anyone who is old enough to have
lived through the 1950s, 60s, and 70s knows that it
was not uncommon for a typical wage-earner to buy
a house, support a family, and even put the kids through
college with just one income. That doesn't happen
any more, and these statistics are another way of
expressing America's changed reality.
Interestingly, almost all of the
research by economists shows that our opening up to
foreign trade contributed to this massive redistribution
of income. The only question is: how much? Even if
we take the smaller estimates of how much redistribution
was due to increased trade not to mention US
firms moving production overseas it is easy
to show that about three-quarters of the US labor
force has suffered a net loss due to globalization.
This takes into account (as do the above numbers on
the real median wage) all the cheap DVD and CD players,
clothing, and other consumer goods that we now import
from overseas. For the vast majority of Americans,
the losses from globalization have outweighed the
gains, in strictly economic terms.
This should not be surprising, since
our political leaders have made it their mission for
more than 30 years to rewrite the rules of global
commerce (for example, in such agreements as the North
American Free Trade Agreement or the World Trade Organization)
in ways that give corporations more power and workers
less.
What about the developing world? Unfortunately the
official, undisputed numbers tell a very different
story here, too, than the one we have heard from the
cheerleaders on TV. The growth of income per person
in the low and middle-income countries dropped sharply
over the last 20 years. If we compare the last two
decades (1980-2000) to the previous 20 years (1960-
1980), we find that these economies advanced by less
than half their prior rate of growth.
As a result of this slower economic
growth, most developing countries also saw reduced
progress over the last 20 years in such areas as life
expectancy, infant and child mortality, literacy,
and education. This long experiment in corporate-led
globalization has been a failure, at home and abroad.
As with the end of the "new economy," it
is time to face up to the facts.
Mark Weisbrot is a former resident of
Urbana and one-time Democratic presidential primary
candidate. He is currently the Co-Director of the
Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington,
DC. This article was first published in the Washington
Post. |