News From Terre Haute, Indiana

Local & Bistate

May 15, 2008

Is the U.S. getting an economic shaft?

Professor: Marriage to global economy has many costs

TERRE HAUTE — In the U.S. government’s marriage to the global economy, some labor officials feel China got the gold mine and America the shaft.

“If we’re going to talk about the benefits of trade, we might as well talk about the costs,” Indiana State University economics professor Don Richards, Ph.D., told about 20 participants at a Fair Trade Voter Forum on Thursday evening in the Terre Haute Labor Temple on South 13th Street.

Greg Goode, Republican candidate for the 8th District’s U.S. congressional seat, attended, as did a representative for his opponent, Rep. Brad Ellsworth.

Richards, ISU history professor Lisa Phillips, Ph.D., and Tom Szymanski of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Local 725 hosted the forum to discuss the impact of treaties such as the North American Free Trade Agreement on the local economy with area voters and candidates.

Richards said active steps need taken to prevent more exporting of American jobs, along with the development of the worker and human rights within the Third World.

“American wage-earners tend to be the losers even when trade agreements are fair,” Richards said, noting the sheer volume of foreign workers willing to tolerate unsafe conditions and lower wages.

But that willingness is compounded, he and the others on the panel said, by American tax laws that benefit corporations who invest overseas. And things are further complicated by trade agreements with nations, such as some in South America, which turn a blind eye at the murders of union organizers.

Phillips said since NAFTA’s inception in 1994, the number of Hoosier jobs created has been significantly offset by those lost.

In what she termed “the aftermath of NAFTA,” the American manufacturing sector has seen tremendous losses.

Phillips said the current state and federal administrations point out the number of gross jobs created, but often decline to specify what kind of jobs those are, chiefly in the service industry.

“Historically, manufacturing jobs pay better than service jobs and have better benefits,” she said, comparing retail and restaurant workers to union manufacturing employees.

Right now, she said, Indiana’s economy is about half and half with regard to manufacturing and service, whereas it was once predominantly manufacturing.

But the drive of corporations to seek “cheap labor” is nothing new, she said, explaining the early 20th-century term “run-away shops,” which were plants corporations moved southwest and to escape union organizing and higher wages during the early 1900s.

Today, many of those same multinational companies are simply running overseas, she said.

Szymanski read from an article whose statistics indicate that a majority of Americans like the concept of free trade in theory, but not the results.

Richards acknowledged that American consumers have, to a great degree, made the choice to buy cheaper, foreign-made goods, thus participating in the industrial exodus. And this, he said, can only be solved by government intervention.

“There is no substitute for law,” he said, explaining that the government should heavily regulate foreign-made goods and prevent their trade here if the nation of origin violates fair trade agreements.

“Real wages have been stagnant or declining since 1975,” he said of union manufacturing jobs, noting that something needs to be done to correct this.

Terre Haute resident David Hills, 69, told the group that in 1900 the city was nicknamed “Little Pittsburgh” for its booming steel and foundry industry. Today those jobs are gone, he said.

“NAFTA was the biggest mistake Washington has ever made,” he said.

Goode, campaigning for a spot in Congress, said “I think both the Republicans and Democrats in Congress have let us down.”

Goode told the story of a small British manufacturer named Rolls Royce, who in the name of free trade provided engines to Germany just prior to the onset of World War II.

“We’re handing it to them on a silver platter,” he said about American investment in China, a nation he feels could become a threat at some point in the future, “98 percent of our circuit boards come from China.”

“When it comes to NAFTA, all we have to do is a simple spreadsheet,” he said after the meeting. “Compare the jobs gained to the jobs lost, and the wages gained to the wages lost.”



Brian M. Boyce can be reached at (812) 231-4253 or brian.boyce@tribstar.com.

Text Only | Photo Reprints
Local & Bistate
Latest News
Multimedia
Like us on Facebook!
Community Calendar
Loading…
Events by eviesays.com
TribStar.com Poll
Front page
AP Video
Man Falls Off Crane, Dies After Police Standoff Witness Describes Fla. Face-chewing Attack Raw Video: Cop Shoots Man Eating Another's Face Man in Crane at Texas College Says He's Armed Unexpected Smog in Pristine National Parks Obama Honors Fallen Troops at Arlington Cemetery Raw Video: Deadly Explosion at Minn. Paper Mill Dairy Farm Uses Chiropractor to Help Cows Romney Promises World's Strongest Military Russia Condemns Ally Syria Over Massacre of 108 Air Canada Plane Makes Emergency Landing Raw Video: Earthquake Shakes Evacuees in Italy Obama Pays Tribute to Vietnam Veterans Beryl Knocks Out Power in Florida Raw Video: 19 Dead in Qatar Shopping Mall Fire 15 Dead in Northern Italy's 5.8-magnitude Quake Service Dogs Help Wash. Soldiers Battling PTSD Raw Video: Memorial Day Aboard Intrepid New Ticks Spread Across Southeast, Diseases Rise Beryl Makes Landfall on Florida Coast
NDN Video
Los Angeles Bar Bans Bachelorettes Hamster Plays Dead Beyonce Shows Off 60 Pound Weight Loss at Concert Drunk Women Breaking Into Houses: A New Trend? LeAnn Rimes Rocks Short Shorts Raw Video: Cop Shoots Man Eating Another's Face Gordon Ramsay Carried Off Field Man Dies Getting Lap Dance Kim Kardashian Claims Items Stolen from Her Luggage Bear cools off in Calif. family's pool Ep. 3: Chopped Desserts Air Force dad surprises family at baseball game Justin Bieber Wanted for Questioning for L.A. Scuffle J.Lo and Marc's Friendly Reunion Man Falls Off Crane, Dies After Police Standoff Jet makes emergency landing after debris falls off Raw Video: Deadly Explosion at Minn. Paper Mill Cynthia Nixon Ties the Knot Woman, 80, Falls Out of Skydive Harness Mid-Jump Keira Reveals Engagement Ring
Parade
Magazine

Click HERE to read all your Parade favorites including Hollywood Wire, Celebrity interviews and photo galleries, Food recipes and cooking tips, Games and lots more.
  • -

    March 12, 2010

activity
Real Estate News