Saturday, 24 June 2023

Protectionism

 

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Many westerners still believe that free trade is what we need, and all of our economic problems come today from not having real free trade. Just as the communists say, “True communism has never been tried.” They will cry, “true and absolute free trade has never been tried.” Putting aside that an absolute version of either of these things is an impossible utopia, and therefore there is no place where you can hope to institute them fully. The great portion of them we have experienced is enough to show us that having either of these things in their full purity would do incredible damage to the economy of many nations, and seriously harm many people. One would lead to complete anarchy and the oligarchic rule of the rich (wait isn’t that where we are?), the other to utter collapse, and the rule of the corrupt wealthy (wait, they lead to the same result on different paths? Interesting!).

But the idea that free trade is better than communism for a time at least is not hard to make. But is it better than protectionism? The answer on this is not so resounding in the positive. P.J. O’Rourke makes this interesting note in one of this books,  

“In The Wealth of Nations the accused were all the world's potentates, politicians, and wealthy merchants. But these were also the veniremen, judges, and officers of the court. Surprisingly, acquittal of the mercantilists wasn't immediate. William Pitt the Younger, prime minister during Smith's last years, accepted the evidence and instituted some reforms suggested by Wealth. Alexander Hamilton, architect of American protectionism, did not. More than two and a quarter centuries after Wealth's publication—what with the neomercantilists running China, the opposition to globalization being voiced around the globe, and the occasional rock getting thrown through the window of a Starbucks because it doesn't foster "sustainable development" among coffee bean growers—the jury is still out.”[i]

O’Rourke wrote this in 2007, when the rise of China was starting to become incredibly clear, but the vibrancy of the Wealth of the West was still on show for many in the world to see. However, now things are different. The protectionism of China, and the forced protectionism of Russia via sanctions, is now showing the weaknesses of the relatively free trade societies of the West. The nations that focused on protecting their economies from outsourcing, and which focus on ensuring production is properly subsidized in their own countries, are now quickly overshadowing the Western nations, before which they were once forced to bow.   

So why is China's economy is overtaking the world?

China's economic philosophy is that your economic self-interest must serve the national interest.

The West's economic philosophy is that economic self-interest does serve the national interest.

Despite how similar these sentences sound, they are a world apart in application. The latter results in the destruction of national production and the outsourcing of many production jobs overseas, so that the wealthy benefit and everyone else is pushed onto welfare or low paying service jobs. The former leads to the exact opposite, the collection of national production and the growth of local production jobs, and the rapid industrialisation and growing prosperity of your nation.

This is why China is beating us. Ironically, this is also how America beat Britain and the European powers in the late 19th century and early 20th century (two wars in Europe supercharged this process). That is, through Protectionism.

The jury may have been out at one point, but I do not think we can say that any more. Trade between nations is good and necessary to some degree. Abundant trade can lead to prosperity and wealth and then sets up the conditions for degradation.Free trade accelerates how much money you can make in the short term, before the fracturing of every social institution brings this all to a grinding halt. Time to rethink things.

References.



[i] P.J. O’Rourke, 2007, On The Wealth of Nations, Grove Press.

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