Free Trade
Free Trade
In the simplest of terms, free trade is the total absence of government policies
restricting the import and export of goods and services. While economists have long
argued that trade among nations is the key to maintaining a healthy global economy, few
efforts to actually implement pure free-trade policies have ever succeeded. What exactly
is free trade, and why do economists and the general public view it so differently?
Seven Disadvantages
The biggest criticism of free trade agreements is that they are responsible for job
outsourcing. There are seven total disadvantages:
1. Increased Job Outsourcing- Reducing tariffs on imports allows companies to
expand to other countries. Without tariffs, imports from countries with a low cost of
living cost less. It makes it difficult for U.S. companies in those same industries to
compete, so they may reduce their workforce. Many U.S. manufacturing industries did,
in fact, lay off workers as a result of NAFTA. One of the biggest criticisms of NAFTA is
that it sent jobs to Mexico.
2. Theft of Intellectual Property: Many developing countries don't have laws to
protect patents, inventions, and new processes. The laws they do have aren't
always strictly enforced. As a result, corporations often have their ideas stolen.
They must then compete with lower-priced domestic knock-offs.8
3. Crowd out Domestic Industries: Many emerging markets are traditional
economies that rely on farming for most employment. These small family farms
can't compete with subsidized agri-businesses in the developed countries. As a
result, they lose their farms and must look for work in the cities. This aggravates
unemployment, crime, and poverty.9
4. Poor Working Conditions: Multi-national companies may outsource jobs to
emerging market countries without adequate labor protections. As a result,
women and children are often subjected to grueling factory jobs in sub-standard
conditions.10
5. Degradation of Natural Resources: Emerging market countries often don’t have
many environmental protections. Free trade leads to depletion of timber,
minerals, and other natural resources. Deforestation and strip-mining reduce
their jungles and fields to wastelands.11
6. Destruction of Native Cultures: As development moves into isolated areas,
indigenous cultures can be destroyed. Local peoples are uprooted. Many suffer
disease and death when their resources are polluted.12
7. Reduced Tax Revenue: Many smaller countries struggle to replace revenue lost
from import tariffs and fees.13
Solutions
Trade protectionism is rarely the answer. High tariffs only protect domestic industries in
the short term. But, in the long term, global corporations will hire the cheapest workers
wherever they are in the world to make higher profits.
A better solution than protectionism is the inclusion of regulations within trade
agreements that protect against the disadvantages.
Environmental safeguards can prevent the destruction of natural resources and cultures.
Labor laws prevent poor working conditions. The World Trade Organization enforces
free trade agreement regulations.
The Philippines has free trade agreements with China, India, Japan, South Korea, and
Australia and New Zealand under ASEAN.
But for a lot of critics, it’s not just the size of the pie that matters, but who gets what.
They argue that even if free trade actually creates more wealth overall, most of that
wealth goes to the richest and most powerful, at the expense of everyone else. In richer
countries people worry that free trade will make it easier for their jobs to be moved
overseas. In poorer countries people worry that free trade will give international
corporations too much control over their economies (and politics).
There’s also an argument that free trade makes it harder for countries to develop from
poor to rich. If every country specializes in what they’re ‘best’ at making, poorer
countries can get stuck specializing in lower wage industries like mining, fishing or
farming. Instead they argue that some degree of protectionism is needed to build up
more advanced industries.
In all of this it's good to keep in mind that details matter. Some trade deals actually
have provisions to help the people likely to be hurt by more trade. Other have provisions
intended to force countries to protect the environment or improve working conditions.
Other deals don’t do this at all.
Also, not all trade has the same economic consequences. For instance, trade between
countries with similar economies—like the countries within Western Europe— is very
different from trade between the EU and China. That’s part of the reason people can be
for free trade in some cases and against it in others.