For the last two decades, we've heard many myths purporting to explain the loss of American manufacturing jobs. CEOs, for instance, typically say they've sent jobs overseas because they can't find skilled American workers. Conservative economists say the giant sucking sound is that of technology replacing obsolete workers. And conservative politicians say job loss is the result of high corporate tax rates, even though ours are among the lowest effective corporate tax rates in the industrialized world.
All of these explanations are fables with a purpose: They are designed to deny the obvious by pretending that exploitation and policies that encourage exploitation aren't the root cause of offshoring. More specifically, they ask us to ignore the fact that tariff-free trade agreements and tax loopholes incentivize companies to shift production to countries where slave wages, environmental degradation and human rights abuses are tolerated.
But now at least a few manufacturing jobs are suddenly coming back to America, and the same CEOs, economists and politicians who have tried to squelch any honest discussion of exploitation are inadvertently admitting that exploitation has always been the manufacturing economy's invisible hand. They are admitting it when they concede that jobs are returning primarily because American wages are precipitously dropping at the same time Chinese minimum wages have slightly risen — from awful (in some places, $100 month) to a mere terrible (still just $240 a month).
This is not some fringe theory. It's a widely acknowledged fact.
President Barack Obama admitted it when in his State of the Union address he said jobs are returning because "it's getting more expensive to do business in places like China." Economists at the Boston Consulting Group underscored it when in August they said employment growth is happening because rising Chinese wages are "eroding China's cost advantages" while the United States "is becoming a lower-cost country" as American wages decline.
And GE Consumer & Industrial CEO James Campbell reiterated it when he recently told The New York Times that "making things in America is as viable as making things any place" because domestic labor costs are now "significantly less with the competitive wages" — read: far lower wages — now accepted by American workers.
Now that this consensus is finally out in the open, the real question for America is simple: Do we accept an economic competition that asks us to emulate China?
If our answer is yes, then we should support current state legislative proposals to reduce child labor protections; back federal legislation to eliminate all environmental, wage and workplace safety laws; and applaud corporations that crush unions and further reduce wages in America. We should also probably encourage our fellow countrymen to follow Apple Inc.'s Chinese workforce by simply accepting $17-a-day paychecks, 12-hour workdays and six-day workweeks.
Indeed, if we accept this race-to-the-bottom style of competition, then we're basically saying Chicago should look more like Chengdu; our heartland should look more like the poverty-stricken interior of China; and 21st-century America should look more like late 19th-century America.
If, alternately, we reject this dystopian future, then it requires us to more seriously consider things like tariffs, industrial policy, tax incentives for domestic investment and Buy America laws for government procurement. In other words, it requires us to declare that access to the American marketplace is no longer free — that corporations that want to sell things to Americans must play by our wage, environmental and human rights rules no matter where they make their products.
Between these two paths, there is no "third way," and doing nothing will likely mean that the uptick in American manufacturing jobs will prove fleeting. A choice, therefore, must be made — and it should be a no-brainer.
David Sirota is best-selling author of the new book "Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live In Now." He hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado. Email him at ds@davidsirota.com, follow him on Twitter @davidsirota or visit his website at DavidSirota.com.
COPYRIGHT 2012 CREATORS.COM

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9 Comments | Post Comment
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You always make the fat lady sing. Another great column.
Comment: #1
Posted by: demecra zydeem
Thu Feb 16, 2012 2:55 PM
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How about the fact that unsound fiat money policies since 1913 of the (privately owned) Federal Reserve, and now all western central banks, have devalued our dollar by 95%.
Comment: #2
Posted by: J Seamanis
Fri Feb 17, 2012 9:25 AM
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Any time binary thinkers like Sirota tell you "there's no third way," it's a safe bet there is.
Sirota named one himself: do nothing.
A better option than emulating China, as he would agree.
Sirota knows that much -- we aren't going back to the 1800s barring an apocalyptic event.
But doing nothing might also be a better choice than Sirota's call for more regulations, tarrifs and higher taxes.
The protectionist road he would travel smacks of Smoot-Hawley, a major cause of the first depression.
Fortunately, there are other options as well.
How about we stop regressive payroll taxes (a tax on labor).
Ease up on workers and those who employ them.
-- we can fund FICA/Medicare under a consumption tax model instead.
Or start paying down the national debt and strengthen the dollar as we go.
Yes, we'll have to make some painful spending cuts and raise taxes, but it'll hurt a lot less now than later.
As for the stronger dollar, making a copper penny a copper penny again would be a good start.
There are other ideas -- how many "third ways" can you can think of?
Comment: #3
Posted by: oddsox
Fri Feb 17, 2012 10:53 AM
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oddsox: Exchanging the payroll taxes for consumption taxes wouldn't have any real affect as the same people are being taxed AND you exchange a tax where you work and pay into your social security and medicare for one that isn't dedicated reducing the legitimacy of SS/Medicare and making it easier to eliminate such programs.
Yes, there is always the 'do nothing' option which will probably be basically what this country will do. With taxing the corporations and the wealthy taken off the table, there isn't any way the government can get out of debt without hurting the country (short term at least) more than being debt free would help. Debt isn't the problem and if you think it is maybe you need to go back to economics class and listen more closely when Keynesian theory is discussed.
Ease up on those who employ workers? How so? Maybe what David said, eliminate decent wages, environmental laws and worker safety?
Protectionism does have its own problems but obviously this Free Trade situation isn't working as advertised. We need to get our money back on it and try something different. I think we should make any company who wants to sell product to Americans pay for the right to do so if they don't make the product here. Maybe it would raise prices, but I'd rather pay higher prices than be unemployed or employed at starvation wages.
David is talking about a very real threat that one of our national parties would have no problem seeing it come to pass. Unfortunately, the other party isn't engaged in putting forth policies that are very much better.
Comment: #4
Posted by: Susan Aker
Fri Feb 17, 2012 9:21 PM
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Susan A
Don't mistake consumption taxes for an attack on Social Security/Medicare.
A consumption tax (point of purchase sales tax, made progressive by exempting groceries, rents, meds, utilities -- things upon which the poor spend most of their income) would replace payroll taxes as a funding vehicle only.
SS/Medicare beneftis would remain the same if the new tax was at a level that made the swap revenue-neutral.
No need to change the formula for computing benefits, the IRS would still have the necessary records.
The same people would pay?
Not so much.
Everyone would pay, but the rich would pay more.
Unlike now, as we have FICA payroll taxes stop after $106,800 in wages.
And remember, "Everyone" would include foreign tourists and the wealthy on their high end purchases.
Those who make their income from capital gains pay no payroll taxes now.
Not taxing labor with payroll taxes would eliminate a huge obstacle to hiring.
Would you pay an extra dollar at the movies if it meant your neighbor could go back to work?
Tax consumption, not labor.
Comment: #5
Posted by: oddsox
Sat Feb 18, 2012 2:59 PM
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A simpler solution... raise the FICA payroll tax cap! And you can also have a luxury tax too to make the rich pay more of their fair share!
Swapping the payroll tax for a sales tax is a Republican recipe for middle-class trouble. First Republicans will say "we can't exempt those free-loading poor from paying the sales tax" (just like they already do with the income tax) and so then they'll start making everyone pay sales tax for basic necessities. Then they'll say "you're hurting the rich 'job creators' because they can't afford to buy their brand new yachts!" so they'll exempt them from paying, claiming the rich will just buy all their goods in a country with a lower sales tax. Pretty soon we're back to where we are today: the rich, who own our government and get special tax rules written just for them, paying lower taxes than the rest of us. Social Security is eliminated. The rich get richer and everyone else gets poorer. Say hello to the the new feudalism, same as the old feudalism. Republicans rejoice.
As far as the "third way" (do nothing), that is already one of the choices - the status quo, what we are already doing following the conservatives' mythical so-called "free market" plan. Just like a conservative to double count. (Oooh, I know! There is a "fourth way"... do something!)
To get back to the topic that Mr. Sirota writes about, corporations will always go wherever labor is the cheapest if they are allowed to. This is a fact. Nothing would make them more happy then to find people to do work for them without paying them or providing virtually any benefits to them (they used to call it "slavery"). This is the ugly side of capitalism and is why we need a strong government and strong unions that will keep their abusive and exploiting tendencies in check. What is most troubling is that they have captured our government and are now able to 1) create their own tax system and trade policies, 2) destroy any power that threatens them (unions and collective bargaining), 3) write legislation that allows them to escape the costs of doing business (allowing them to pollute our environment, etc.), and 4) subvert the will of the American people at every turn. That's why we need a constitutional amendment saying that corporations are not real people and are not entitled to the same rights granted to We the People by our Constitution!
Comment: #6
Posted by: A Smith
Wed Feb 22, 2012 12:45 PM
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First of all let me say that I am a traditional MAIN STREET conservative, NOT A NEOCON WALL STREET FASCIST. Us real conservatives are an endangered species. This Neocon "Free" Trade/"Free" Market philosophy is a farce and always has been! There is no such thing as a "Free" Market and never has been. Every market throughout history has been controlled by someone: either honest men of integrity, lying opportunist thieves like we have here in America, or someone in between.
What we need are leaders, not CEO's and their puppet politicians. We need to treat outsourcing of jobs for what it is, HIGH TREASON AND ECONOMIC TERRORISM! Those who promote "Free" Trade and unregulated markets should be treated like the traitors and economic terrorists they are! Corporations MUST BE ABOLISHED! Every company must be either a sole proprietorship (meaning one owner) or a simple partnership, but these untaxable, unnacountable corporations MUST BE PERMANENTLY ABOLISHED!
We need to have real taxes, duties, tariffs, and excise taxes, but no income tax whatsoever on the poor and middle class and no property taxes whatsoever on the poor and middle class. We need to abolish the privately owned "Federal" Reserve and have a government owned national bank that prints real money backed by silver (which is more plentiful than gold and thus would benefit the public more than a gold standard, which because of its scarcity would only benefit the rich).
We need to end these wars for profit and abolish the Active Duty mercenary forces, abolish the Pentagon, abolish the CIA, and abolish Homeland Insecurity. We should only have an Army National Guard with an air defense component, a Coast Guard, and a small deep water Navy to ONLY escort American vessels overseas in a time of piracy. Also, we should flush the notion of competition down the toilet where it belongs and start COOPERATING with each other here at home and with other countries. Competition brings out the worst in people, but cooperation brings out the best in people!
Comment: #7
Posted by: John Purcell
Tue Feb 28, 2012 8:31 PM
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Yes,Yes, Yes!
Comment: #8
Posted by: jdmeth
Thu Mar 8, 2012 8:45 PM
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I strongly think that child labor laws should be changed to allow teenagers to work part time in fast food places and elsewhere way before the age of 18. It would help bring back the work ethic in America which has reached abysmal lows these days. The public schools are largely not teaching anything useful for the technological age and children have little or no homework to do. It is time to teach our children from a young age, 13 and older, to work for a living and get payed for it! Children used to help parents do work on a farm at very young ages. It is time to give children an opportunity to do part time real work in the real world and get paid for it!
Comment: #9
Posted by: Uldis Sprogis
Mon Mar 12, 2012 5:48 AM
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