This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/aug/02/populist-trade-policies-wont-protect-jobs-anywhere-in-the-world
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 1 | Version 2 |
---|---|
Populist trade policies won’t protect jobs anywhere in the world | |
(6 months later) | |
Countries that close themselves off to foreign competition eventually lose their edge, with innovation, jobs and growth suffering | |
Wed 2 Aug 2017 12.14 BST | |
Last modified on Wed 29 Nov 2017 08.01 GMT | |
Share on Facebook | |
Share on Twitter | |
Share via Email | |
View more sharing options | |
Share on LinkedIn | |
Share on Pinterest | |
Share on Google+ | |
Share on WhatsApp | |
Share on Messenger | |
Close | |
As US and European political leaders fret about the future of quality jobs, they would do well to look at the far bigger problems faced by developing Asia – problems that threaten to place massive downward pressure on global wages. In India, where per capita income is roughly a tenth that of the US, more than 10 million people a year are leaving the countryside and pouring into urban areas, and they often cannot find work even as chaiwalas, much less as computer programmers. The same angst that Americans and Europeans have about the future of jobs is an order of magnitude higher in Asia. | As US and European political leaders fret about the future of quality jobs, they would do well to look at the far bigger problems faced by developing Asia – problems that threaten to place massive downward pressure on global wages. In India, where per capita income is roughly a tenth that of the US, more than 10 million people a year are leaving the countryside and pouring into urban areas, and they often cannot find work even as chaiwalas, much less as computer programmers. The same angst that Americans and Europeans have about the future of jobs is an order of magnitude higher in Asia. |
Should India aim to follow the traditional manufacturing export model that Japan pioneered and that so many others, including China, have followed? Where would that lead if, over the next couple of decades, automation is going to make most such jobs obsolete? | Should India aim to follow the traditional manufacturing export model that Japan pioneered and that so many others, including China, have followed? Where would that lead if, over the next couple of decades, automation is going to make most such jobs obsolete? |
There is, of course, the service sector, where 80% of the population in advanced economies works, and where India’s outsourcing sector still tops the world. Unfortunately, there, too, the path ahead is anything but smooth. Automated calling systems already have supplanted a substantial part of the global call centre business, and many routine programming jobs are also losing ground to computers. | There is, of course, the service sector, where 80% of the population in advanced economies works, and where India’s outsourcing sector still tops the world. Unfortunately, there, too, the path ahead is anything but smooth. Automated calling systems already have supplanted a substantial part of the global call centre business, and many routine programming jobs are also losing ground to computers. |
China’s economic progress may have been the big story of the past 30 years, but it struggles with similar challenges. While China is far more urbanised than India, it, too, is still trying to bring 10 million people a year into its cities. Between jobs lost to automation and to lower-wage competitors such as Vietnam and Sri Lanka, integrating new workers is becoming increasingly difficult. | China’s economic progress may have been the big story of the past 30 years, but it struggles with similar challenges. While China is far more urbanised than India, it, too, is still trying to bring 10 million people a year into its cities. Between jobs lost to automation and to lower-wage competitors such as Vietnam and Sri Lanka, integrating new workers is becoming increasingly difficult. |
Recently, the rise in global protectionism has made this difficult situation worse, as epitomised by the decision of Foxconn (a major supplier to Apple) to invest $10bn (£7.5bn) in a new factory in Wisconsin. The 13,000 new jobs in the United States is a drop in the bucket compared to the 20m (or more) that India and China must create each year, or even compared to the 2m that the US needs. | Recently, the rise in global protectionism has made this difficult situation worse, as epitomised by the decision of Foxconn (a major supplier to Apple) to invest $10bn (£7.5bn) in a new factory in Wisconsin. The 13,000 new jobs in the United States is a drop in the bucket compared to the 20m (or more) that India and China must create each year, or even compared to the 2m that the US needs. |
At the margin, the US and Europe might have some scope to make trade fairer, as Trump says he will do. For example, many Chinese steel plants have state-of-the-art pollution controls, but these can be switched off to save costs. When the result is that excess output is dumped at cheap prices into world markets, western countries are justified in taking countermeasures. | At the margin, the US and Europe might have some scope to make trade fairer, as Trump says he will do. For example, many Chinese steel plants have state-of-the-art pollution controls, but these can be switched off to save costs. When the result is that excess output is dumped at cheap prices into world markets, western countries are justified in taking countermeasures. |
Unfortunately, the history of trade protectionism is that it rarely takes the form of a surgical strike. Far more often, the main beneficiaries are the rich and politically connected, while the losers are consumers who pay higher prices. | Unfortunately, the history of trade protectionism is that it rarely takes the form of a surgical strike. Far more often, the main beneficiaries are the rich and politically connected, while the losers are consumers who pay higher prices. |
Countries that go too far in closing themselves off to foreign competition eventually lose their edge, with innovation, jobs, and growth suffering. Brazil and India, for example, have historically suffered from inward-looking trade policies, though both have become more open in recent years. | Countries that go too far in closing themselves off to foreign competition eventually lose their edge, with innovation, jobs, and growth suffering. Brazil and India, for example, have historically suffered from inward-looking trade policies, though both have become more open in recent years. |
Another problem is that most western economies have long since become deeply intertwined in global supply chains. Even the Trump administration had to reconsider its plan to pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement when it realised that a lot of US imports from Mexico have substantial US content. Erecting high tariff barriers might cost as many US jobs as Mexican. And if the US were to raise its import tariffs sharply, a large part of the costs would be passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. | Another problem is that most western economies have long since become deeply intertwined in global supply chains. Even the Trump administration had to reconsider its plan to pull out of the North American Free Trade Agreement when it realised that a lot of US imports from Mexico have substantial US content. Erecting high tariff barriers might cost as many US jobs as Mexican. And if the US were to raise its import tariffs sharply, a large part of the costs would be passed on to consumers in the form of higher prices. |
Trade will surely increasingly permeate the service sector, too. Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (named after the 18th-century chess-playing machine which actually had a person cleverly hidden inside) is an example of a new platform that allows buyers to contract very small specific tasks (for example, programming or data transcription) at developing countries’ wage rates. Amazon’s clever slogan is “artificial artificial intelligence.” | Trade will surely increasingly permeate the service sector, too. Amazon’s Mechanical Turk (named after the 18th-century chess-playing machine which actually had a person cleverly hidden inside) is an example of a new platform that allows buyers to contract very small specific tasks (for example, programming or data transcription) at developing countries’ wage rates. Amazon’s clever slogan is “artificial artificial intelligence.” |
Even if protectionists could shut down outsourcing of tasks, what would the cost be? Online service platforms do need to be regulated, as early experience with Uber has demonstrated. But, given the massive number of new jobs that India and China need to create every year, and with the internet remaining highly permeable, it is folly to think advanced economies can clamp down tightly on service exports. | Even if protectionists could shut down outsourcing of tasks, what would the cost be? Online service platforms do need to be regulated, as early experience with Uber has demonstrated. But, given the massive number of new jobs that India and China need to create every year, and with the internet remaining highly permeable, it is folly to think advanced economies can clamp down tightly on service exports. |
So how should countries deal with the relentless advance of technology and trade? For the foreseeable future, improving infrastructure and education can achieve a great deal. While the rest of the world floundered in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, China continued to extend its vast logistical and supply chains. | So how should countries deal with the relentless advance of technology and trade? For the foreseeable future, improving infrastructure and education can achieve a great deal. While the rest of the world floundered in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, China continued to extend its vast logistical and supply chains. |
In a world where people are likely to have to change jobs frequently and sometimes radically, wholesale changes in adult education are needed, mainly through online learning. Countries need to institute stronger redistribution through taxes and transfers. Traditional populist trade policies, like those that Donald Trump has espoused, have not worked well in the past, and are likely to perform even worse now. | In a world where people are likely to have to change jobs frequently and sometimes radically, wholesale changes in adult education are needed, mainly through online learning. Countries need to institute stronger redistribution through taxes and transfers. Traditional populist trade policies, like those that Donald Trump has espoused, have not worked well in the past, and are likely to perform even worse now. |
Kenneth Rogoff is professor of economics and public policy at Harvard University and recipient of the 2011 Deutsche Bank prize in financial economics, was the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund from 2001 to 2003. The co-author of This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, his new book, The Curse of Cash, was released in August 2016. | Kenneth Rogoff is professor of economics and public policy at Harvard University and recipient of the 2011 Deutsche Bank prize in financial economics, was the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund from 2001 to 2003. The co-author of This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly, his new book, The Curse of Cash, was released in August 2016. |
Economics | |
Project Syndicate economists | |
China | |
India | |
Nafta | |
comment | |
Share on Facebook | |
Share on Twitter | |
Share via Email | |
Share on LinkedIn | |
Share on Pinterest | |
Share on Google+ | |
Share on WhatsApp | |
Share on Messenger | |
Reuse this content |