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Though
Bush 41
and Bush 43 often disagreed, one issue did unite them
both with
Bill Clinton:
protectionism.
Globalists all, they rejected any federal measure to
protect America's industrial base, economic independence
or the wages of U.S. workers.
Together they rammed through
NAFTA,
brought America under the
World Trade Organization,
abolished tariffs and granted
Chinese-made goods
unrestricted access to the immense U.S. market.
Charles McMillion of MBG Information Services has
compiled, in 44 pages of charts and graphs, the results
of two decades of this Bush-Clinton experiment in
globalization. His compilation might be titled,
"Indices of the Industrial Decline and Fall of the
United States."
From 2000 to 2009, industrial production declined here
for the first time since the 1930s. Gross domestic
product also fell, and we actually lost jobs.
In traded goods alone, we ran up $6.2 trillion in
deficits—$3.8 trillion of that in manufactured goods.
Things that we once made in America—indeed, we made
everything—we now buy from abroad with money that we
borrow from abroad.
Over this Lost Decade, 5.8 million manufacturing jobs,
one of every three we had in Y2K, disappeared. That
unprecedented job loss was partly made up by adding 1.9
million government workers.
The last decade was the first in history where
government employed more workers than manufacturing, a
stunning development to those of us who remember an
America where nearly one-third of the U.S. labor force
was producing almost all of our goods and much of the
world's, as well.
Not to worry, we hear, the foreign products we buy are
toys and low-tech goods. We keep the high-tech jobs here
in the U.S.A.
Sorry. U.S. trade surpluses in advanced technology
products ended in Bush's first term. The last three
years we have run annual trade deficits in ATP of nearly
$70 billion with China alone.
About our dependency on Mideast oil we hear endless
wailing.
Yet most of our imported oil comes from Canada, Mexico,
Venezuela, Nigeria and Angola. And for every dollar we
send abroad for oil or gas, we send $4.20 abroad for
manufactured goods. Why is a dependency on the Persian
Gulf for a fraction of the oil we consume more of a
danger than a huge growing dependency on China for the
necessities of our national life?
How great is that dependency?
China accounts for 83 percent of the U.S. global trade
deficit in manufactures and 84 percent of our global
trade deficit in electronics and machinery.
Over the last decade, our total trade deficit with China
in manufactured goods was $1.75 trillion, which explains
why China, its cash reserves approaching $3 trillion,
holds the mortgage on America.
This week came a report that Detroit, forge and furnace
of the Arsenal of Democracy in World War II, is
considering razing a fourth of the city and turning it
into farm and pastureland. Did the $1.2 trillion trade
deficit we ran in autos and parts last decade help kill
Detroit?
And if our purpose with NAFTA was to assist our neighbor
Mexico, consider. Textile and apparel imports from China
are now five times the dollar value of those imports
from Mexico and Canada combined.
As exports are added to a nation's GDP, and a trade
deficit subtracted, the U.S. trade deficits that have
averaged $500 billion to $600 billion a year for 10
years represent the single greatest factor pulling the
United States down and raising China up into a rival for
world power.
Yet, what is as astonishing as these indices of American
decline is the indifference, the insouciance of our
political class. Do they care?
How can one explain it?
Ignorance of history is surely one explanation. How many
know that every modern nation that rose to world power
did so by sheltering and nurturing its manufacturing and
industrial base—from Britain under the
Acts of Navigation to 1850,
to protectionist America from the Civil War to the
Roaring Twenties, to Bismarck's Germany before World War
I, to Stalin's Russia, to
postwar Japan,
to China today?
No nation rose to world power on free trade. From
Britain after 1860 to America after 1960, free trade has
been the policy of powers that put consumption before
production and today before tomorrow.
Nations rise on economic nationalism; they descend on
free trade.
Ideology is another explanation. Even a (Milton)
Friedmanite free-trader should be able to see the
disaster all around us and ask: What benefit does
America receive from these mountains of imported goods
to justify the terrible damage done to our country and
countrymen?
Can they not see the correlation between the trade
deficits and relative decline?
Republicans seem certain to benefit from the nation's
economic crisis this November. But is there any evidence
they have learned anything about economics from the
disastrous Bush decade?
Do they have any ideas for a wholesale restructuring of
U.S. trade and tax policy, for a course correction to
prevent America's continuing decline?
Has anyone seen any evidence of it?
COPYRIGHT CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.
Patrick J. Buchanan
needs
no introduction to
VDARE.COM readers; his book State
of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America, can
be ordered from Amazon.com. His latest book
is Churchill,
Hitler, and "The Unnecessary War": How
Britain Lost Its Empire and the West Lost
the World,
reviewed
here by
Paul Craig Roberts.