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<!-- you can have any number of categories here --> [[Category:Bill Mitchell]] [[Category:Globalization, Free Trade and Economic Freedom]] [[Category:Fair Trade]] <!-- 1 URL must be followed by >= 0 Other URL and Old URL and 1 End URL.--> {{URL | url = http://bilbo.economicoutlook.net/blog/?p=34860}} <!-- {{Other URL | url = }} --> <!-- {{Old URL | url = }} --> {{End URL}} {{DES | des = "There is never a case that a corporation should have institutional structures available that allow it to use ‘commercial’ arguments to subvert national legal positions... A progressive policy framework has to allow all workers access to work even if it explicitly destroys jobs as part of an overall strategy to redress matters of concern (whether to advance labour, environmental or broader issues) and allow the poorest members in each nation opportunities for upward mobility." | show=}} <!-- insert wiki page text here --> <!-- DPL has problems with categories that have a single quote in them. Use these explicit workarounds. --> <!-- otherwise, we would use {{Links}} and {{Quotes}} --> {{List|title=The case against free trade – Part 4|links=true}} {{Quotations|title=The case against free trade – Part 4|quotes=true}} {{Text | I am travelling most of today and do not have much time. However, there were a few more issues I wanted to raise in relation to the ‘Free Trade’ mini-series of blogs but on Tuesday I ran short of time and thus I thought I would take this chance to round the discussion off. So this blog might be considered Part 4 in that series on free trade. In Part 1, I showed how the mainstream economics concept of ‘free trade’ is never attainable in reality and so what goes for ‘free trade’ is really a stacked deck of cards that has increasingly allowed large financial capital interests to rough ride over workers, consumers and undermine the democratic status of elected governments. In Part 2, I considered the myth of the free market, the damage that ‘free trade’ causes’. In Part 3, fair trade was considered along with so-called ‘free trade’ agreements. Today, some nuances and additional thoughts are provided. The aim of this mini-series is to build a progressives case for opposition to moves to ‘free trade’ and instead adopt as a principle the concept of ‘fair trade’, as long as it doesn’t compromise the democratic legitimacy of the elected government. There is also a video of my keynote presentation at UMKC in September 2016 available in this blog. What’s new in Modern Monetary Theory – Kansas City Presentation – September 16, 2016 Here is a video of my Keynote presentation at the Post Keynesian Conference, held at UMKC in Kansas City in September. The title of the talk was “What’s new in Modern Monetary Theory” and covers the material that I presented in the following blogs: 1. Modern Monetary Theory – what is new about it?. 2. Modern Monetary Theory – what is new about it? – Part 2 (long). 3. Modern Monetary Theory – what is new about it? – Part 3 (long). I produced the video from the live stream of the event, which means the production (video and audio) is not as good as it could be. It runs for a little over an hour and excludes the Q&A that followed (only to reduce the size of the file). UMKC will make the full session available at some later date I guess. Free trade and Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) Some readers have seemingly thought that by discussing trade at all, and, specifically recommending import and capital controls in some instances, these blogs run counter to what Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) says about the external sector and its capacity to place limits on fiscal policy. A major point of difference between Post Keynesians (in the New Cambridge tradition – Cripps and Godley etc) and the original proponents of MMT (which includes this author) is that a currency-issuing government is not constrained in its capacity to generate full employment through appropriate fiscal policy settings. Accordingly, such a government can always use its currency-issuing capacity to ensure that all available productive resources that are for sale in that currency, including all idle labour, can be productively engaged. That is, such a government can always, without exception, ensure there is full employment. The capacity of a currency-issuing government, for example, to introduce a Job Guarantee, is not compromised by the external status of the nation. There is no financial constraint on such a government who desires to achieve that desirable policy goal. While that might sound salutary, and, by comparison with the ambitions of most governments in this neo-liberal era, is light years ahead on any well-being index, it somewhat evades a further question as to whether achieving this desirable goal moves a nation out of poverty. However, the worst-case scenario for a nation, irrespective of its government’s currency-issuing capacity, is defined by the real resources that such a nation can access. If a nation can only access limited quantities of real resources relative to its population, then no matter what capacities the government might have, that nation, in all likelihood, will be poor. The ultimate constraint on prosperity is the real resources a nation can command, which includes the skills of its people and its natural resource inventory. Thus, even if the government productively deploys all the resources a nation has available, it will still be poor if its resource base is limited. But it is here that we have some nuances as a result of trade. In general, the balance of payments should not be an issue of concern for governments in their quest to maximise the well-being of their citizens. The reality is that all open economies are susceptible to balance of payments fluctuations. What is usually not mentioned is that these fluctuations were terminal during the fixed exchange rate system for deficit countries because they meant the government had to permanently keep the domestic economy is a depressed state to keep the imports down so as not to run out of foreign reserves. For a flexible exchange rate economy, the exchange rate does the adjustment. There is no balance of payments constraint facing a nation in this regard. Is there evidence that fiscal deficits create catastrophic exchange rate depreciation in flexible exchange rate countries? None at all. There is no clear relationship in the research literature that has been established. If you are worried that rising net spending will push up imports then this worry would apply to any spending that underpins growth including private investment spending. The latter, in fact, will probably be more ‘import intensive’ because most LDCs import capital. Please read my blog from yesterday – Balance of payments constraints – for more discussion on this point. What about a nation that has to import all of its essentials to sustain life? Please read my blog – Ultimately, real resource availability constrains prosperity – for more discussion on this point. We have to acknowledge that if a nation has little that the world wants by way of its exports, and if that nation is dependent on imports for, say, food or energy, then the capacity of the currency-issuing government to alleviate poverty is limited. An understanding of MMT should bring that point home. First, where imported food (or other essentials) dependence exists then the well-being of the citizens in that nation cannot be solved within its own borders, especially if its export potential is limited. Imposing austerity on these governments is no solution. The world has to take responsibility to ensure that it alleviates any real resource constraints that operate through the balance of payments. Note, this is not a balance of payments constraint as it is normally considered. It is a real resource constraint arising from the unequal distribution of resources across geographic space and the somewhat arbitrary lines that have been drawn across that space to delineate sovereign states. In this context, a new multilateral institution should be created to replace both the World Bank and the IMF, which is charged with the responsibility to ensure that these highly disadvantaged nations can access essential real resources such as food and not be priced out of international markets due to exchange rate fluctuations that arise from trade deficits. I discussed the multi-lateral institutions in these blogs: 1. Reforming the international institutional framework – Part 1. 2. Reforming the international institutional framework – Part 2. Second, there has to be international agreements to outlaw speculation by investment banks on food and other essential commodities. Third, a further progressive policy intervention, which, ideally, should be agreed to at the international level should be to declare illegal speculative financial flows that have no necessary relationship with improving the operation of the real economy. In the absence of such international commitments, nations should consider imposing capital controls where they can be beneficial bulwarks against the destructive forces of speculative financial capitalism. Fourth, in some situations a case can be made to impose import controls on equity grounds where the export base is thin and a nation is struggling to amass sufficient real resources to ‘feed and clothe’ its people. Please read my blog – Why capital controls should be part of a progressive policy – for more discussion on this point. Fifth, as regular readers will recall, I do advocate import restrictions in some cases. This has nothing to do with fears that speculators will trash the currency and create hyperinflation through import price acceleration. While imports are clearly a benefit and exports are clearly cost there are still equity implications involved in the mix of imports that a nation might enjoy. I heard once that South Africa had the largest per capita ownership of BMW cars, which is astounding, if true, given the mass poverty of the majority of its population. Selective import controls (especially those targetted on products consumed by the rich that are not essential to general well-being), if they can be effectively designed, can ensure that a nation with a limited export base can import goods and services that target the provision of benefits via imports to the poor in the first instance. Fifth, in some cases it will be in the global interest to restrict the capacity of a nation to export. For example, I’m thinking of those arguments where it is better to leave the coal in the ground than to mine it and worsen the environmental damage already existing. In those cases, a single nation should not be punished for the pattern of geographic resource distribution and a global response is needed to make sure the damage to that nation’s export potential does not impair its ability to import and fight poverty. Further, my rejection of so-called ‘free trade agreements’ in no way is a concession that MMT’s downplaying of balance of payments issue is misplaced. The concern is not about exchange rate dynamics at all. It is rather a reflection of my progressive bent, which tells me that corporate interests should never subvert the democratic standing of a nation state. In all cases, the latter has primacy over the former. So there is never a case for so-called ‘Investor State Dispute Mechanisms’ in bi-lateral agreements between nations. A nation state is defined by its legislature and that institutions sets the legal framework in which all activity within the sovereign borders engages. Corporations have rights under that framework as do citizens. But the assumption is that the legislative framework should reflect the goals of national well-being. There is never a case that a corporation should have institutional structures available that allow it to use ‘commercial’ arguments to subvert national legal positions. Engagement or boycott? A standard line from politicians in countries such as Australia is that even if a nation state is of pariah status it is better to use trade with them to maintain a ‘dialogue’, in order to generate social and political changes. This ‘convenient’ justification is used to justify continued trade with China, for example, despite that nations abysmal human rights record. So is engagement better than boycotts? In Ferbuary 2014, the US Secretary of State, John Kerry, frustrated with Israeli resistence to any moves (by the US) to discipline the illegal settlments in occupied Palestinian territories, told an audience in Munich that (Source): People are talking about boycott. That will intensify in the case of failure. We all have a strong interest in this conflict resolution. Today’s status quo absolutely, to a certainty, I promise you 100%, cannot be maintained. It’s not sustainable. It’s illusionary. There’s a momentary prosperity, there’s a momentary peace. He later denied he was advocating boycotts but was, rather, arguing that the pressure for boycotts was mounting, given the success of these strategies to achieve substantial political changes in the past. He was no doubt thinking of the boycott imposed by the Danish Danske bank that broke commercial relations in early 2014 with “Israel’s largest bank, over the financing of settlements built across the old 1967 border in breach of international law.” The trade restrictions were motivated by what the Danske Bank referred to as “ethical and legal conflicts” (Source). The Israeli government claimed any boycotts would be “immoral and unjustified” and was “antisemitic”. The claim of immorality was a bit rich given that in January 2014, we learned that Isreali soldiers had shot two young West Bank footballers in the foot, a deliberate act to terminate their sporting careers. The Nation article (March 3, 2014) – After Latest Incident, Israel’s Future in FIFA Is Uncertain – which was one of many reports in the world media about this incident, reported that two teenage Palestinean soccer players: … were on their way home from a training session in the Faisal al-Husseini Stadium on January 31 when Israeli forces fired upon them as they approached a checkpoint. After being shot repeatedly, they were mauled by checkpoint dogs and then beaten. Ten bullets were put into Jawhar’s feet. Adam took one bullet in each foot. After being transferred from a hospital in Ramallah to King Hussein Medical Center in Amman, they received the news that soccer would no longer be a part of their futures … This is only the latest instance of the targeting of Palestinian soccer players by the Israeli army and security forces. Death, injury or imprisonment has been a reality for several members of the Palestinian national team over the last five years. Just imagine if members of Spain’s top-flight World Cup team had been jailed, shot or killed by another country and imagine the international media outrage that would ensue. Imagine if prospective youth players for Brazil were shot in the feet by the military of another nation. But, tragically, these events along the checkpoints have received little attention on the sports page or beyond. The article goes on to promote the isolation of Israel in international soccer. International sport is an aspect of trade between nations (for example, merchandising and tourism that are associated sporting contests). It is clear that such trade restrictions are considered to be an appropriate strategies to pursue in order to gain political traction against pariah states. The obvious example of such actions was the – Sporting boycott of South Africa during the apartheid era. While it was unclear what the aim of these boycotts were (end sporting segregation or apartheid in general), the boycott was expressed via a UN General Assembly policy and clearly helped end the apartheid system in South Africa. The Abu Dhabi-based National newspaper article (July 21, 2014) – As South Africa proved, sporting boycotts work – wrote: Divestment and boycotts are familiar tactics from the international anti-apartheid movement, but they didn’t match the psychological power of the sports boycott: rugby was an essential part of the identity of the South African regime’s base, and denying their ability to compete on an international stage was one of the most painful sanctions in the minds of many apartheid supporters. The rugby bans were particularly powerful. I was one of the five-odd thousand people who protested at Melbourne’s Olympic Park on July 3, 1971 as part of a highly co-ordinated ‘Stop the Tours Campaign’. The protests severely disrupted the 1971 Springbok rugby tour of Australia. The Melbourne protest was a very violent protest with many arrests by a vicious police response. I will leave the personal aspects aside here. The authorities erected barbed wire barriers to stop ground invasions but bolt cutters became the preferred tool of the protesters and ground invasions could not be stopped. While the conservative governments at the time (Federal and State) did everything they could to keep the Tour going (declaring an unprecedented state of emergency in once state), the reality was that this Tour marked the end of Australia’s sporting relations with South Africa until apartheid finally fell as a result of internal pressure within South Africa. The protesters in 1971 knew that we couldn’t stop the rugby tour (although it was severely disrupted) but the real aim was to stop the upcoming South African cricket tour. The strategy was successful. The Australian Cricket Board knew they couldn’t guarantee the security of the cricket grounds in the face of growing protests and cancelled the tour in late 1971, saying “we will not play them until they choose a team on a non-racist basis”. Politics had come to sport – where, of course, it had always been, despite the denials of the conservatives who opposed the apartheid boycotss. It is the same sort of arguments that ‘free traders’ use to defend trade with pariah states – economics should not mix with politics they say. To which I say, economics is political and bringing economic pressure on nations to generate political change that advances the well-being of citizens and the planet should always be a core progressive strategy. A more nuanced argument relates to issues such as the whaling bans against Japan, Norway and Iceland. Again, these are attempts to restrain trade. The so-called International Whaling Commission set out regulations for whaling aimed at conserving the resource – the so-called Convention. The problem was it allowed whaling for “scientific purposes”, which Japan, in particular has exploited, despite evidence that its practices in the Southern Ocean go well beyond anything that might be consistent with scientific research. The Japanese also claim cultural rights to whale meat, which is hard to dispute, given their long history. But that is the point – do nation-specific ‘cultural’ practices usurp all other concerns, including human and animal rights? The Australian government (of all political persuasions) has been a vehement opponent of Japanese whaling in the Southern Ocean and was instrumental in getting the matter heard before the International Court of Justice. Eventually, the International Court of Justice banned whaling in 2014 with little impact on Japan, who have defied the ruling. Representative of the Australian view was this claim by a conservative political advisor (Source): We can’t succeed alone … [but we] … can use Australia’s soft power influence to pressure Japan’s far bigger trading partners, the United States and the European Union, to enforce apparently impotent ICJ and IWC rulings by other means – by exerting their powerful economic and political pressure on Japan, and any other nation contemplating similar courses of action. In other words, trade and other economic restrictions. The hypocrisy is that while Australia has taken a valid moral and environmental position to restrain international trade in the context of whaling it refuses to take similar positions with respect to nations such as China, Myanmar etc who breach the rights of workers and human rights in general. One might suspect it is the scale of the issue that dominates. Clearly, if we took a consistent progressive position, Australia and other nations who espouse the primacy of human rights would not tolerate China, in the same way, they eventually brought pressure on South Africa to end its hideous apartheid system. But then the corporate involvement in China is very large and principles have a way of giving way to dollars. A truly progressive position should not be so compromised. I would thus impose trade boycotts on China even though it would reduce the availability of low-cost imports that help workers in advanced countries enjoy a higher real standard of living. The huge issue for Australia, of course, is the arguments surrounding coal exports, which generate huge volumes of export revenue for Australia (Newcastle, where I live is the world’s largest coal export port) and China is a major market. There are two arguments for closing down the coal export industry. First, the environmental case. Second, the human rights case outlined above. A truly progressive agenda would close the coal sector down. But, then it would have to be recognised that this would have significant effects on working class communities in the coal producing areas. I discussed this issue in relation to the ‘second machine age’ in this blog – Is there a case for a basic income guarantee – Part 4 – robot edition. A progressive policy framework has to allow all workers access to work even if it explicitly destroys jobs as part of an overall strategy to redress matters of concern (whether to advance labour, environmental or broader issues) and allow the poorest members in each nation opportunities for upward mobility. Part of these transition arrangements might also include more generous foreign aid to ensure that trade constraints do not interrupt international efforts to relieve world poverty. The devil is, of course, in the detail. Conclusion That ends my series on trade. }}
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