Patrick J. Buchanan writes:
"This is called slave
labor," said Pope Francis. The Holy
Father was referring to the $40 a month paid to apparel workers at that
eight-story garment factory in Bangladesh that collapsed on top of them,
killing more than 400. "Not paying a just wage ... focusing
exclusively on the balance books, on financial statements, only looking at
personal profit. That goes against God!"
The pope is describing the dark side of
globalism. Why is Bangladesh, after China, the
second-largest producer of apparel in the world? Why are there 4,000 garment
factories in that impoverished country which, a few decades ago, had almost
none? Because the Asian subcontinent is where Western
brands — from Disney to Gap to Benetton — can produce cheapest. They can do so
because women and children will work for $1.50 a day crammed into factories
that are rickety firetraps, where health and safety regulations are
nonexistent.
This is what capitalism, devoid of a conscience,
will produce. Rescuers at the factory outside Dhaka have
stopped looking for survivors, but expect to find hundreds more bodies in the
rubble. The Walt Disney Co., with sales of $40 billion a
year, decided — after an apparel plant fire in November took the lives of 112
workers — to stop producing in Bangladesh. "The Disney ban now extends to
other countries, including Pakistan," says The New York Times, "where
a fire last September killed 262 garment workers."
Not long ago, the shirts, skirts, suits and
dresses Americans wore were "Made in the USA" — in plants in the
Carolinas, Georgia and Louisiana, where the lower wages, lighter regulations
and air conditioning that came after World War II had attracted the factories
from New England. The American idea was that the 50 states and
their citizens should compete with one another fairly. The feds set the health
and safety standards that all factories had to meet, and imposed wage and hour
laws. Some states offered lower wages, but there was a federal minimum wage.
How did we prevent companies from shutting down
here and going to places like today's Bangladesh to produce as cheaply as they
could — without regard for the health and safety of their workers — and to send
their products back here and kill the American factories? From James Madison to the mid-20th century, we
had a tariff. This provided revenue for the U.S. government to
keep other taxes low and build the nation's infrastructure. Tariffs prevented
exploiters of labor from getting rich here on sweatshops abroad.
Tariffs favored U.S. companies by letting them
compete for free in the U.S. market, while a cover charge was placed on foreign
goods entering the U.S.A. Foreign producers would pay tariffs for the privilege
of competing here, while U.S. companies paid income taxes. Foreigners had to buy a ticket to the game.
Americans got in free. After all, it's our country, isn't it?
But in the
late 20th century, America
abandoned as "protectionism" what Henry Clay had called The American
System. We gave up on economic patriotism. We gave up on the idea that the U.S.
economy should be structured for the benefit of America and Americans first. We embraced globalism. The ideological basis of globalism was that, just
as what was best for America was a free market where U.S. companies produce and
sell anywhere freely and equally in the U.S.A., this model can be applied
worldwide.
We can create a global economy where companies
produce where they wish and sell where they wish. As one might expect, the big boosters of the
concept were the transnational corporations. They could now shift plants and
factories out of the high-wage, well-regulated U.S. economy to Mexico, China
and India, then to Bangladesh, Haiti and Cambodia, produce for pennies, ship
their products back to the U.S.A., sell here at the same old price, and pocket
the difference.
As some who were familiar with the decline of
Great Britain predicted, this would lead inexorably to the deindustrialization
of America, a halt to the steady rise in U.S. workers' wages and standard of
living, and the enrichment of a new class of corporatists. Meanwhile, other nations, believing yet in
economic nationalism, would invade and capture huge slices of the U.S. market
for their home companies, their "national champions." The losers
would be the companies that stayed in the U.S.A. and produced for the U.S.A.,
with American workers.
And so it came to pass. U.S. real wages have not
risen in 40 years. In the first decade of the century, America lost
5 million to 6 million manufacturing jobs, one in every three we had, as 55,000
factories closed.
Since Bush 41 touted his New World Order, we have
run trade deficits of $10 trillion — ten thousand billion dollars! Everybody —
the EU, China, Japan, Mexico, Canada — now runs a trade surplus at the expense
of the U.S.A. We built the global economy — by gutting our own.
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