Would we truly be racist if we demanded "Made in the USA"?

Amazingly, in the past several months I've been called a racist 3 times, more than anytime in my life!  The first time was when the Jeremiah Wright thing broke out and I defended the guy, I was called bigoted against whites.  Then, just the other I was called first "pro-Black" then "racist against whites" because I favored Barack Obama over that walking museum piece from Arizona.  Now, today, the conservative economic blog site, Carpe Diem, is labeling people like me racist for demanding things be made in this country!

Considering that I'm a white guy, I found the first two accusations humours, to say the least.  But I take issue with Carp Diem's assertions that because I would prefer my products be made at least in North America, that I some how am a bigot.  Of course, Mark J. Perry (the site's author) was coy in not saying it himself but quoting Ayn Rand to University of Rochester Economics Professor, Steven E. Landsburg instead.


 

"Both major parties are infested with protectionists who would discriminate on the basis of national origin no less virulently than David Duke or any other racist would discriminate on the basis of skin color."

 

- Prof. Landsburg


 

Giving preference to American-made products over German or Japanese products is the same injustice as giving preference to products made by whites over those made by blacks. Economic nationalism, like racism, means judging men and their products by the group from which they come, not by merit.

   
~Ayn Rand Institute

We're all familiar with who Ayn Rand is and the institute with her name on it.  But what about Professor Landsburg?  Well he was on Fox News a while ago, ironically enough Carp Diem has that clip. He was an John Gibson, the infamous Fox News anchor who recently lost one of his shows, talking about this.  Of course, the site's author decided to the side of the professor, while amazingly enough the anchor of the normally pro-free trade network, went against him.

I frankly have a problem with the whole notion of economic patriotism = racism.  Yeah, in an abstract way, you could make that argument.  But then if you could also say I favor Iranians over Indians because I go to the 7-11 by my house versus the EZ Mart a half  a mile away.  At the very least, I can be accused of being a nationalist, but I tend to think I'm more of a regionalist.  The color of one's skin, or their ethnicity was never a factor or played importance, I grew up believing you don't judge a book by it's cover.  But wanting to have stuff made here, using good union labor is not the same damn thing!

Now, if one were to go to those so-called victims of our racist thinking, primarily Asia, what do you think they are thinking on such a topic if asked?  Do you think the average worker in Kyoto or Shanghai holds an altruistic viewpoint when it comes to jobs?  I remember, back in the early 80s, and my father's best friend, who was an engineer for Mister Coffee telling us how on his trip to Japan, it was common to see on television Japanese auto workers taking a sledgehammer or crowbar to an American-made product.  That throughout the media, the newspapers, radio, even the NHK, that commentary would be pepper with "the superiority of Japanese-made goods" along with the continued promotion of high trade barriers and the usage of domestic-made goods.  He always came back home feeling ill, it should be noted, my dad's late best friend was a Nisei.

China's the big manufacturing place now.  Patriotism, especially since the Olympics, has been running more commonplace than ever.  Are you going to tell me, that 400-thousand plus slave-waged folks working at the Foxconn assembly plants building your Wiis and iPods aren't saying the same thing to themselves?  No folks, this isn't racism at all, it's demanding economic security!

What we have here, is another shill for the free-traders.  I don't know what this professor is getting out of this.  Perhaps he's trying to make it with the Cato crowd.  There are many like him, who believe that its ok to ship jobs to lower waged nation, because its part of some grand idea of such august intent.  A friend of mind once said that these folks are like a corrupt version of the hippies, peace and harmony through a balance sheet.

Carpe Diem, though should be ashamed to make such accusations.  And seriously, if you're gonna say it, then at least say it and don't hide behind others' quotes!  You think it's racist, don't just add that title, add some meat to your claims!  Well, what else can I say?  Folks like us are for restoring the middle class and giving economic security, while it seems (and I am willing to admit if I'm wrong) that jokers like the one mentioned here want simply want free trade so they can save a buck at Wal-mart.  The again, I'm not surprised, its one of the sites Larry Kudlow often quotes and uses on the air.

Actually, if one thought about it, what these fools propose is more economic suicide.  Indeed, straight from the same site, Carp Diem shoots themselves in the foot.  Several days ago, he was going on about how that there was no "inflation threat," particularly the wage kind.  Now he put up a chart using the Bureau of Labor Statistics data on % change for previous year on in monthly average hourly earnings.  Please take a look at this chart, and tell me what you see. 

 

I will grant you, that the rate of growth was going higher and higher prior to '83, indicating wage inflation as a component of the larger inflationary period.  But overall, earnings for workers were north of 5%, well above even the the longer-term trend official bullshit government inflation number.  Suddenly though, as we cross into 1985, overall wage growth collapses. Hourly-waged employees went from a growth of 7-8% a year to 2 and a half to 4% a year; hell, growth dipped even as low as 1.5%!  Now if you want to take the government's official inflation rate, which is currently 6.2% and subtract that from the wage growth.  That negative number, while unscientific, in a way is showing what employees are losing.  You know what, better yet, take a look at a chart below. 

This is the official CPI/inflation chart from the government (courtesy of Freelunch.com).  Take the period from when Carp Diem starts and compare it to the same period on the second chart.  You will see that Americans have either been net losers to inflation, or just barely matching the official malarkey rate!  So what was happening from the start of that wage collapse to now?  Free trade deals, from Reagan on to the present, have been made or attempted. 

Globalization, in which wage arbitrage has been the real name of the game to get ahead against one's competitors.  Now, ok, I grant you I haven't posted any empirical evidence to prove that assertion of free-trade and the wage collapse. But what the hell else with such force against a workforce's wages (outside of outright deflation) could have such an impact?  Any basic economics class will give you the laws of supply and demand and its impact on price.  When you introduce a massive amount of labor supply from the formally-labeled "Third World," and it meets with a set amount of demand from owners of manufacturing companies, you can bet it will hit the price of labor!   So are we racist?  More like realists!

<sup>Cross posted on
The Economic Populist
-
A Community Site for Economics Freaks and Geeks
</sup>



Display:


Didn't think racism mean't getting jobs, tips jar (2.00 / 2)

Well, never really figured wanting folks to have good paying jobs was racist.  Frankly, I think it cheapens the meaning and distracts it from those who should really be labeled racist.  Anyways, thanks for reading and letting me get this off my chest.  I hope you all are having a good week.  Take care now.


by johnny venom on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:03:49 PM EST

Look at your sources (none / 0)

the Ayn Rand institute? Now that is some spin from a group that thinks selfishness is a virtue.
by linc on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:10:38 PM EST

Re: Look at your sources (2.00 / 1)

Objectivism: the litmus test for moral imbecility.


I am not a crook!
by username on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:15:51 PM EST
[ Parent ]

I wont call you racist... (none / 0)

I will call you protectionist (which also means foolish, but we prefer to use the more polite expression)


If you follow history with a long enough arc, things always get better, and the truth always prevails...Gandhi
by SevenStrings on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:14:49 PM EST

Re: Would we truly be racist (none / 0)

By the same token, if you prefer Coke to Pepsi you are basically racist.


"Another problem we have...is that in election years we behave somewhat as primitive peoples do at the time of the full moon." --Harry Truman
by Steve M on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:33:27 PM EST

The modern conservative movement (none / 0)

Has devolved into parody. They fell in love with William Buckley and now all they do is write long, meandering academic essays about how Obama gives long, meandering academic speeches.

And the economists are the worst. They went crazy for the whole global economy thing and it is now a religion. In some ways, it has been productive. If China had not been given a ton of jobs, it might be more of a threat to us.

But if China had not been given a ton of investment money, it might not be eclipsing us as a military power who COULD pose a much bigger threat to us than before.

It means that by making the world more wealthy, other nations can weigh the costs and benefits of just throwing us to the wolves.

We need a focus on the global economy with a nationalist foundation. Our decisions must ultimately be based on what is good for the citizens. If we are taking away jobs from people here, we must ensure they are replaced or that they at least have the ability to take care of themselves. We must make sure that, in a crisis, the US could handle most of its own needs. We gotta make sure that if we give tax money back, it won't be to investors who throw it into international companies.


"Hey, check it out. You just had yourself a glue OD. So you're learning another lesson. Don't do too much glue, or your night sucks."
by vcalzone on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 02:57:17 PM EST

"Made in the USA"? (none / 0)

Didn't Walmart first build it's dominence with a made in the U.S.A. campaign?


by venician on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 03:45:54 PM EST

Re: Would we truly be racist if we .... (2.00 / 1)

Nah. This is free market conservatives who call all the rest of us 'ballast' when they throw us over the side to reorganize corportions and eliminate benefits, so the Wall Street types can profit and we can. . . they don't care what we do as long as we just go away.

They are taking a recognized pattern of wrongful conduct, racism,  and trying to stretch it to cover something it has nothing to do with. Nobody is asking for 'made in USA' because they don't like Chinese factories because the people in them are Chinese. If you were rejecting goods because of the race or orientation of their makers, rather than for the fact that the goods were manufactured there, it would be racist. This is just stupid. It's doubly stupid because the manufacturing sector is probably the most integrated work place in this nation.

What they want to do is stigmatize with the racist charge those who object to their firing people who make higher wages and move their factories to places where they can pay less with no benefits, and destroy communities in the move, and to preclude complaints by waving the evil allegation of racism when people complain about what they are doing. Another version of it is hiring cheap engineers and technicians in India and some other places, bringing them in to be trained by the US workers whose jobs are being handed over to them, and then sending them back and firing the trainer. It's not the Indian-ness of the replacement workers but the manipulation of geography and people for corporate profit, and the damage those corporations are doing to the rest of us. That is not racism, it's old fashioned economic exploitation for profit.

This sort of inappropriate re-categorization seems to be going around, in advance of a regime change,  so they can have something to use, which the new regime might respect, against people for whom the free market notion is not the first principle, above patriotism, the Constitution, the well being of Americans as it has been for Republicans for the last eight years. they gotta find a way to label their victims the bad guys. That's all this is. Ignore it.


by Christy1947 on Wed Aug 27, 2008 at 05:37:40 PM EST


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