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Title: The Jobs Problem is Worse Than the War Problem
Source: Counterpunch
URL Source: http://www.counterpunch.com/
Published: Jul 13, 2005
Author: Paul Craig Roberts
Post Date: 2005-07-13 08:58:30 by Zoroaster
Keywords: Problem, Problem, Worse
Views: 452
Comments: 43

July 12, 2005

The Jobs Problem is Worse Than the War Problem The No-Think Nation By PAUL CRAIG ROBERTS

Thought is not an American forte. Consider the speed with which our government got us trapped in two quagmires, Iraq and Afghanistan.

The CIA says that Bush's invasion of Iraq has created ideal conditions for training insurgents and terrorists. The longer we are there, the worse it gets.

Our military is being worn down by a gratuitous war of no benefit to anyone except Osama bin Laden. Bush's war has provided substance for bin Laden's propaganda and radicalized the Middle East.

Bush's war is being financed by debt, and the result is to give our foreign bankers more control over our interest rates and our currency's value, should they choose to use the power we have placed in their hands.

Not only has our government demonstrated an inability to think before rushing to war, it cannot think about the economy either.

Each month in the 21st century the government's own statistics tell the tale of the US winding down as a superpower and devolving into a third world country. Not a single net new high tech or manufacturing job has been created for native-born Americans in the 21st century.

Month after month this devastating information is released and ignored. Now comes a report from Richard Freeman, professor of economics at Harvard University and associate of the National Bureau of Economic Research. Freeman's conclusions suggest that the US is not only losing its lead in science and engineering but also might be losing the professions themselves.

A country that outsources its manufacturing and its R&D abroad doesn't have jobs for its own engineers and scientists.

Corporations have moved many information technology, high-tech manufacturing, engineering, and research and development jobs away from America to lower cost countries principally in Asia. The result is declining opportunities and salaries for American graduates in science and engineering, which discourages students from these curriculums.

As my free market friends are found of saying, "the market works." It certainly does. The market is working to close down the great American middle class and to dismantle the ladders of upward mobility.

The US economy in the 21st century has been able to create new jobs only in nontradable domestic services. A labor market orientated toward domestic services is the hallmark of a third world economy.

The jobs problem is more serious than the war problem and receives even less attention. Economists misperceive the offshore outsourcing of jobs as the beneficial workings of free trade, a subject they have given scant thought for 200 years, being, as they are, content with Ricardo's demonstration that comparative advantage ensures mutual gains from trade.

America's no-think economists have yet to fathom that the offshore outsourcing of jobs reflects the workings of absolute advantage, not comparative advantage. When American capital, technology and business know-how employ foreigners in place of Americans, foreigners benefit and Americans lose.

In the short-run the corporations benefit. The lower labor costs raise profits and executive bonuses. But the long-run effect is to destroy the US consumer market for the goods and services that the corporations supply from abroad.

American profits and American employment no longer move in tandem. A recent report in the New York Times by John Markoff and Matt Richtel says profits have rebounded in Silicon Valley but not employment. They use the example of Wyse Technology, a maker of computer terminals.

At the beginning of this year, 90 percent of Wyse's work force was in Silicon Valley. At the present time the figure is 48 percent, with only 15 percent of its engineers remaining in Silicon Valley. The reason?

Wyse has created technology development teams in India and China, adding 100 employees in India and 35 in China so far this year.

America has a new development model, one unprecedented in history. The growth and prosperity of American corporations is now keyed directly to the employment of foreign workers in place of Americans.

It is impossible for a country to prosper when its capital, technology, and business knowledge are used to enhance the productivity of foreign workers in place of its own. American incomes are stagnating and falling. By abandoning American employees, corporations are eroding the great American consumer market and America's position in the first world.

Paul Craig Roberts has held a number of academic appointments and has contributed to numerous scholarly publications. He served as Assistant Secretary of the Treasury in the Reagan administration. His graduate economics education was at the University of Virginia, the University of California at Berkeley, and Oxford University. He is coauthor of The Tyranny of Good Intentions. He can be reached at: paulcraigroberts@yahoo.com

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 7.

#7. To: Zoroaster, 1776, Jethro Tull, Neil McIver (#0)

America has a new development model, one unprecedented in history. The growth and prosperity of American corporations is now keyed directly to the employment of foreign workers in place of Americans.

and those of us who complain about [our] treasonous, traitorous "leaders" are labeled anti-american? my god, everything has been turned upside down. "That Which is Good Shall Be Called Evil."

christine  posted on  2005-07-13   9:46:53 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 7.

#17. To: christine (#7)

and those of us who complain about [our] treasonous, traitorous "leaders" are labeled anti-american? my god, everything has been turned upside down. "That Which is Good Shall Be Called Evil."

When we adopted "the invisible hand" as our highest economic truth, we allowed individual, personal greed to reign supreme and supplant other moral inclinations. It's been coming for a while. In past decades the greed was tempered by Christianity but the trashing of that ethos by the "elites" has been effective. We've got some rethinking to do but it will come only after we have reaped the whirlwind IMHO.

Phaedrus  posted on  2005-07-13 10:04:49 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: christine (#7)

everything has been turned upside down. "That Which is Good Shall Be Called Evil."

you can say that again

1776  posted on  2005-07-13 10:26:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#36. To: christine (#7)

my god, everything has been turned upside down.

Yep. And the scary part is... only a tiny percentage of the population even notices. What do you think the % is? 1%? Most of those on the left that oppose Bush don't count because they are playing the D's vs R's game, just like the BOTS. How many really understand that conditions in the US are truly Orwellian, right down to the beginnings of a police state and the end of privacy rights? How many realize that the drive to Marxism is a drive toward totalitarianism?

In BOTworld, the perception is even worse. They will make claims such as the economy is better than ever. So many things are downright Orwellian, and their reaction is 'things are better than ever.'

***

Collectivism The problem of so many Americans losing manufacturing jobs is bad enough. And then we have economists and politicians taking the public stance that somehow it is a good thing. Maybe most politicians won't go on the record and say it, but their actions make it obvious.

I think part of the problem regarding so many American workers losing jobs and the process being praised is an example of the evils of collectivism. The individual in the US is no longer valued. Groups are valued, and that applies now to economics.

I don't know much about economics, so someone please correct me if I am in error. From a few things I have read, there was an important shift years ago to the Keynesian school of economics. This involved ignoring individuals and their role in the economy and going to a completely aggregate, or group view. When you watch people arguing for free trade, the fate of individuals is never even a concern to them. They simply do not care. The 'system' and aggregate numbers are all that matter.

This also leads to an ends justifies the means approach to economics. Adherence to ideology no matter what the consequences is one of the results of this. A good example of consequences this can lead to can be found in the history of the Ukraine, when in the 30's, collectivism was so important to the rulers, economists, academics, etc... that millions of Ukrainians died in a famine that was a result of the imposition of the ideology. The attitude in the US is not much different, philosophically.

Anyway, this move to Keynesianism placed importance on aggregates and groups instead of individuals. This is always dangerous. So now we see econs, academics, and pols that only care about a collectivist view of the US. We see this in all aspects of American politics on the federal level. The individual is simply not a concern to them. The typical debate involves someone like Lou Dobbs expressing concern for individual Americans against a collectivist 'free trader' that totally ignores the plight of individuals and quotes aggregate statistics that are of greater value to him. Again, this is collectivist. They will devise some aggregate statistics to make the case that a larger group which the worker is categorized as belonging to is actually BENEFITTING from the process of American individuals- and that is all that matters! Note also the coldness these Keynesians have for the individual- while I place the individual in a position of highest value, they do not value the individual at all. The only value they place on the individual is his role and contribution to the collective statistics. Thus the individual is dehumanized and just a 'part of the system.'

Another example of how these people think is the way they praise deficit spending as an integral part of the economy. They see deficit spending as advantageous, as 'good', because they claim it improves the aggregate numbers. The fact that trillions of debt is a future liabilty for individual American taxpayers is of NO concern to them. They see not burdening individuals with debt they will be paying off their whole lives as not advantageous, as 'bad'. The aggregate is the highest good. The end of improving their arbitrary aggregates they deem as the greatest good justifies the means of American individual workers being crushed. As with those Ukrainian farmers, this group largely couldn't care less about individuals.

Think of how bad things will get as the US becomes more of an integral part of the globalist system it is setting up now. Aggregate numbers in the US will be less important than the 'larger' aggregate numbers in the North American region, say the US, Can, and Mexico. At this point, the good of the group known as the region will be of greater importance than the good of the US alone. I believe our pols are thinking like this already. The Am worker then, will be even less valued. The individual will be of lesser value than the US in aggregate terms and the region in aggregate terms.

Again, I am no expert in economics, but that is how I see it. I am very concerned with collectivism, Marxism taking root in the US. Americans are totally blind to it because they have been indoctrinated into it. Since I have studied it, I see it all around. I think that free trade is international communism in some ways. As far as the system, the ideology, groups being of primary importance, and the individual being of no importance except as part of a collective group needed to drive the aggregate.

The plutocrats determine what aggregate statistics are of utmost importance, thus choosing those that benefit themselves to improve.

The shift of employment opportunities to the service sector and the reaction of the free traders shows how they think. They praise it, couldn't care less about individuals getting hurt, and condition the population thru the media that aggregate statistics they deem as most important are, in fact, important to Americans as individuals. This is part of the reason Americans are not going nuts about outsourcing, hiring of illegals, shift to service sector (how ironic- as Ams serve the Plutocrats, their actual jobs will be service jobs), H1B Visa, etc. They have been conditioned that the individual is less important than the group/aggregate touted as the highest good in the media by the plutocrats. Bush said that Americans' losing manufacturing was no big deal because there were govt programs that would train them for menial jobs- and noone went nuts. Bush fully suuports outsourcing including rewarding corps which do it with big tax cuts. And he gets away with it.

It is outrageous how American workers are being treated. As objects. As slaves who serve the plutocrats. As if workers in a communist system- where the system is all that matters. How corps are given carte blanch to harm individuals, and are even rewarded for it with tax cuts- that the corp lawyers wrote themselves and Congress added them to the legislation. And this move to larger aggregates called globalism will further harm the Am individual- our leaders know this and they overwhelmingly support it. Bush is a traitor. He is sacrificing Americans for the plutocrats, corps, and the 'global economy', all under the lie of free trade.

Absorbing tens of millions of illegals is called social and economic integration. The effect on individuals is not important. Building the region is important. That aggregate is the greatest good. The ends justify the means. Our pols in DC are all traitors. Even those that oppose CAFTA, say, still function as a controlled opposition, not revealing what globalism really is and how it affects Americans as individuals. The US system is becoming a form of Democratic Socialism to easily integrate with Can and Mex in the region.

Had to get that off my chest!

When you say that everything has been turned upside down, I think of all the Orwellian stuff going down, but my primary concern is how the American system does not value the individual any more. Aren't all our pols in DC and the govt beaurocracy functioning as though they are not bound by the Constitution? Don't they all empower groups while weakening individuals? Collectivism. Groups have rights. Highest good is the group, not the individual. The ends (benefitting the group) justifies the means (harming individuals). We are at the point at which groups have so much power that their interests are of more importance than the interests of the vast majority of Ams, when taken as individuals. As in a Marxist system, Groups gain power and are given rights, and individuals lose power and lose rights. There is constant aggression against the middle class majority by groups and govt. Govt actually colludes with groups against individuals. This is another factor working against the typical middle class American worker.

Bayonne  posted on  2005-07-13 13:32:59 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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