I just finished reading the book "The World is Flat" by Thomas L. Friedman in which Friedman spells out the driving forces for globalization and how just about everything can be done cheaper, better, faster in India or China. I agree that as a general principle free trade is a positive thing and that there are a whole lot of really poor people (even highly educated but relatively poor people) around the world who can undercut the 1st world on price so, yes, the first world had better keep innovating or where going to watch many of our best paying jobs go over seas. What I don't agree with him about is that the first world most certainly does not have to go along with unqualified free trade, that unrestricted free trade likely isn't in our best interests (though generally free trade is as long as there are some qualifications) and globalization is not going to "work its way into virtually every field" as Friedman contends. In fact there are many fields which will remain free from any direct impacts on globalization.
Take my own career as a Geologist. I suppose certain parts of the report writing could be farmed out to India but the field work will always have to be done locally as well the lab work. In fact most of our clients will insist on the report writing to be over seen by a registered Professional Geologist in the state of California so it will be hard to even outsource that one aspect of this job. Anything to do with manufacturing can be moved overseas and even some services jobs can be moved overseas (like accounting or computer programing) but that leaves an aweful lot of services jobs which pay well and which can't be moved out of country (think medical, management, marketing, trasportation, etc...) as well as virtually every low paying service jobs. Manfuacturing will have a tough time and will need to keep inovating or die in the globalized economy but that's less then 20% of the total US economy so I'm still not seeing globalization effecting EVERYTHING.
Then of course there is Friedman's whole "globalization is unstoppable and inevitable" theme which sounds nice but I'm not sure it's true.If the US, EU, and Japan suddenly decided to form a free trade agreement with each other and to not let any other country in unless they passed and enforced first world style labor laws, environmental protection laws, child labor laws, etc... then we'd likely see globalization get hit on the head with a brick. After all the US, EU, and Japan account for some where between two thirds and three quarters of the world economy. Why should we consider doing that you ask?
Simple, the current way globalization is structured does help everyone by lowering prices and it does level the playing field by helping businesses draw talent/materials/capital/manpower from all over the world but it also does bring about a race to the bottom. The 1st world must keep lowering its worker protections and environmental laws in order to compete against the 3rd world on price. Sure, this improves conditions in the 3rd world and over time it improves the world average but I'm more concerned about my personal piece of the pie and my nation's piece of the pie. That's selfish and narrow minded but then again those are traits a good capitalist needs. Personally, I would go with a qualified free trade agreement which was designed to push people up without dragging outselves down. How do we do that?
The first thing we do is sign a free trade agreement with the rest of the first world where we all agree on a set of strong worker protections, social protections, child labor laws, environmental laws, and what ever else we feel we need to create a more just society, then we tarrif everyone else out. I can hear you crying "That's not free trade! That's protectionism and it won't work!" but give me a second and I will explain the other steps. Next we agree to end all subsidies such as the wasteful farm subsidies and we agree to let in any country which meets our labor & environmental laws plus who is a democracy and who protects the civil and human rights of their citizens. There would now be an over powering economic reason for countries to become more democratic and to protect the rights of the little guy. To not do so means totally being cut out of most of the world's major markets but complying means free trade. Gee, we seem to have taken the worst edges off of the rush to the bottom and we've added in an excellent reason for dictatorships and one party states (*cough* China *cough*) to democritize or see their export sectors crash.
I think that would be far better then Friedman's flat world.
Take my own career as a Geologist. I suppose certain parts of the report writing could be farmed out to India but the field work will always have to be done locally as well the lab work. In fact most of our clients will insist on the report writing to be over seen by a registered Professional Geologist in the state of California so it will be hard to even outsource that one aspect of this job. Anything to do with manufacturing can be moved overseas and even some services jobs can be moved overseas (like accounting or computer programing) but that leaves an aweful lot of services jobs which pay well and which can't be moved out of country (think medical, management, marketing, trasportation, etc...) as well as virtually every low paying service jobs. Manfuacturing will have a tough time and will need to keep inovating or die in the globalized economy but that's less then 20% of the total US economy so I'm still not seeing globalization effecting EVERYTHING.
Then of course there is Friedman's whole "globalization is unstoppable and inevitable" theme which sounds nice but I'm not sure it's true.If the US, EU, and Japan suddenly decided to form a free trade agreement with each other and to not let any other country in unless they passed and enforced first world style labor laws, environmental protection laws, child labor laws, etc... then we'd likely see globalization get hit on the head with a brick. After all the US, EU, and Japan account for some where between two thirds and three quarters of the world economy. Why should we consider doing that you ask?
Simple, the current way globalization is structured does help everyone by lowering prices and it does level the playing field by helping businesses draw talent/materials/capital/manpower from all over the world but it also does bring about a race to the bottom. The 1st world must keep lowering its worker protections and environmental laws in order to compete against the 3rd world on price. Sure, this improves conditions in the 3rd world and over time it improves the world average but I'm more concerned about my personal piece of the pie and my nation's piece of the pie. That's selfish and narrow minded but then again those are traits a good capitalist needs. Personally, I would go with a qualified free trade agreement which was designed to push people up without dragging outselves down. How do we do that?
The first thing we do is sign a free trade agreement with the rest of the first world where we all agree on a set of strong worker protections, social protections, child labor laws, environmental laws, and what ever else we feel we need to create a more just society, then we tarrif everyone else out. I can hear you crying "That's not free trade! That's protectionism and it won't work!" but give me a second and I will explain the other steps. Next we agree to end all subsidies such as the wasteful farm subsidies and we agree to let in any country which meets our labor & environmental laws plus who is a democracy and who protects the civil and human rights of their citizens. There would now be an over powering economic reason for countries to become more democratic and to protect the rights of the little guy. To not do so means totally being cut out of most of the world's major markets but complying means free trade. Gee, we seem to have taken the worst edges off of the rush to the bottom and we've added in an excellent reason for dictatorships and one party states (*cough* China *cough*) to democritize or see their export sectors crash.
I think that would be far better then Friedman's flat world.
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