economic globalization sociology 2, class 9 copyright © 2014 by evan schofer do not copy or...
TRANSCRIPT
Economic Globalization
Sociology 2, Class 9
Copyright © 2014 by Evan Schofer
Do not copy or distribute without permission
Announcements• Announcements
• Midterm is approaching… one week!• Midterm review sheet on website• Midterm review session:
– During section next week• No section during midterm week
– Agenda• More on economic globalization
Midterm Info• Exam Format:
• Closed book / closed notes• Mix of short answer/multiple choice, medium length,
and perhaps one short essay question• No bluebook needed
• Topic coverage: • All class lecture material
– Lecture notes on course website
• All readings up through Week 5• Commanding Heights video, Episodes 1 & 3
– Available via course web page…
Review: Asian financial crisis• How did globalization cause a crisis for Asian
economies in the 1990s?– 1. As the Thai economy faltered, global investors
pulled money out quickly• When capital flows out of a country, the currency values
drop rapidly: “volatility”• Imports became expensive• Companies could no longer pay off loans to foreign
banks– Bankruptcies, unemployment…
Review: Vicious cycle of financial crisis
Loss of Confidence
Plunging Currency & Economy
Financial Problems
(people, banks, companies)
Adapted From Krugman 2008 Ch 4
Foreign investors sell stocks &
currency; pull out money;
stop lending
plunging economy bankruptcies, unemploymentDropping currency hard to pay off debt in other currencies;
People worry,Investors and lenders get
nervous
Review: Asian financial crisis• How did globalization cause a crisis for Asian
economies in the 1990s?– 2. Contagion
• Worries about Thailand spread to other Asian countries– Self-fulfilling prophecy: fear of problems caused investors to
pull out, creating real problems• Also, many US companies were invested in Asia (or had
made loans)… Now they were losing money– Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) went bankrupt– LTCM had borrowed ~100 billion from US banks…
– Lesson: Integrated economies mean that crises tend to spread• This happened again in 2008 financial crisis…
Participation in globalization• Question: Why do countries want to
participate in globalization?• Esp. given potential for crises (e.g., Mexico, Asia)• What are the benefits? And for whom?
• Answer: International trade and investment can increase economic growth
• Corporations often stand to benefit most... So business elites tend to support globalization
• BUT, other groups in society may also benefit– Investment can create new jobs, employment– Consumers can have access to wider array of goods,
cheaper goods…
Benefits of Investment• Economists predict that foreign capital will
benefit economic growth• Investment spurs economic growth• Allowing foreigners to invest in a country results in
more overall investment• Example: FDI. If Sony builds a TV factory in a country,
the economy will grow
– And, intangible capital flows can have benefits• Foreign banks may charge lower interest rates• Foreign banks may have more capital to lend• This allows domestic companies to invest more
resulting in more growth
Benefits of Trade• Without trade, every country must produce
all kinds of goods – cars, coffee, toys, etc.• Issue: Countries vary in their ability to
produce goods efficiently• Example: Coffee can be grown in America, but not
very efficiently due to climate• Example: Computers can be built in Kenya, but not
very efficiently due to lack of infrastructure & fewer engineers in the labor force
• Result: Without trade, production is less efficient.
Benefits of Trade• Economists Adam Smith and David
Ricardo argued:• Trade allows nations to specialize in what they do
best… their comparative advantage…– See Stiglitz Ch 3, p. 66-67; also Rodrik Ch 3
– Countries can focus on they produce efficiently• And, trade for things they don’t produce efficiently
– Result: Greater efficiency & economic growth• This can produce a win/win situation, where both
countries are better off– Setting aside, for the moment, possible undesirable
environmental/social consequences, etc.
Reading: Rodrik• The benefits of trade
• An analogy: Trade = technology• Trade, like new technology, allows nations to convert
some products (e.g., raw materials) into something else
– Example: Technology allows us to magically turn raw cotton into cloth• This may cause loss of jobs (people who weave), but
that is the price of greater efficiency…
– By analogy: We can magically turn wheat into electronics… by trading with Japan• Likewise, it may cost jobs but is more efficient• We should re-employ people in agro-industry rather
than making electronics in the US…
Reading: Rodrik• So why doesn’t everyone love free trade?
– 1. benefits of trade involve large shifts in production (“distributional effects”)• To reap benefits of trade, we have to shift production
toward things we produce efficiently• Example: We should shift employment away from
electronics manufacturing (if Japan is more efficient) and employ people growing wheat (if we are efficient)
• Very disruptive– Transitional unemployment; Often permanent loss of wages– Unpleasant, unless a country has a very strong safety net &
job training programs.
Reading: Rodrik• So why doesn’t everyone love free trade?
– 2. Benefits diminish as trade barriers are reduced• Trade barriers were high in 1960s/70s. Initial steps
toward free trade has big benefits in terms of efficiency• Now barriers are fairly low. Lowering them further
would not make production much more efficient– But would cause large “distributional effects”
– Rodrik calculates that we must shift $50 in production to gain $51 in economic efficiency• Ex: If we eliminate $50 in electronics manufacturing we
could replace it with $51 in agricultural production• Benefits might not be worth the disruption to the
economy & to people’s lives
Reading: Rodrik• So why doesn’t everyone love free trade?
– 3. Benefits of trade tend to harm the same people repeatedly• Namely, those without high levels of education/skills
– This differs from the technology analogy… technology doesn’t typically wipe out jobs for the same people over & over
• Example: Merchandise trade between Europe/United States & poor countries in Asia may be harming US manufacturing employment (Krugman articles)
• Rodrik points out: Unless a country has strong “safety nets” and job training, it is understandable that many would resist further reduction of trade barriers…
Trade/investment: winners & losers• Who benefits from global trade/investment?
– Consumers benefit from cheap imports– Investors can invest where profits are big
• Ex: individuals, pension funds, Hedge funds– Economic growth is generally good for everyone
• But sometimes the very rich benefit most– Multi-national corporations, because they can
move operations to wherever is cheapest– Highly competitive export-oriented companies
benefit from access to new markets– And, workers in those industries tend to benefit.
Trade/investment: winners & losers
Trade / Investment: Losers• Who typically opposes global trade &
investment?– Workers in industries that will face competition
• And labor unions more generally…
– Citizens who could be affected by• Economic crises• Difficulty regulating global capitalism
– Environmental problems, sweatshops, etc.
– Corporations in industries that will face greater international competition• Example: steel & auto industries in the US.
Barriers to Trade / Investment• Definition: Protectionism = blocking foreign
imports or capital flows• Definition: Liberalization = opening up
markets to greater trade or investment• Also called “opening up markets” • Note: different from typical use of “liberal” in US
Barriers to Trade• Tariff – a tax on imports
• Example: The US government can impose a $2,000 tax on Japanese cars
• Fewer people will buy Japanese cars. Imports drop.
• Quota – a numeric limit on imports• Example: The US may allow only 500,000 Japanese
cars to be imported in any given year.
Barriers to Trade• “Non-tariff” barriers – A government
regulation that indirectly limits trade or makes it more expensive– Example: Strong agricultural subsidies make it
hard for foreign imports to compete• Subsidy = giving government money to producers• Tariffs make imported goods more expensive;
subsidies make the domestic ones cheaper…
– Example: The US may impose complex agricultural inspections of imported fruit• Could be legitimate, or a sneaky way to stop trade
Barriers to Investment• Foreign ownership laws – laws that limit the
ability of foreigners to buy companies• Example: US government could require owners of
corporations to be US citizens
• Capital controls – laws designed to prevent the rapid withdrawal of capital/investment
• Example: Law requiring invested capital to remain in the country for one year
– Thus, preventing rapid flows in and out.
Removal of Barriers• From 1980-present: Worldwide shift from
Keynesianism free markets• “Liberalization” or “opening markets”• Governments negotiate to remove trade barriers
– In direct one-on-one meetings– Or, via international treaties & organizations– GATT; NAFTA; WTO.
Removal of Barriers• Bilateral trade negotiations & treaties:
• Two countries negotiate trade & investment barriers• Ex: The US negotiates with China
– “You reduce tariffs on American cars, and we’ll reduce import quotas on Chinese textiles”
• Multilateral trade agreements • When groups of countries negotiate together to
reduce barriers• NAFTA – North American Free Trade Agreement• GATT & WTO
– GATT = “General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade”– WTO = World Trade Organization
– “Trade war”: when countries raise barriers due to disputes…
Example: Bi-Lateral Trade Negotiations
• South Korea, U.S. May Hold Farm Trade Talks in March
• SEOUL (Reuters) - The United States and its seventh-largest trading partner began talks on a free trade agreement in June 2006. It would be the biggest free trade deal for the United States since the North American Free Trade Agreement was signed in 1992.
• Agriculture has been one of the toughest sectors to negotiate in a free trade deal between two countries, especially because of intense opposition from South Korean farmers to market liberalization. South Korea's farm ministry repeated Seoul's position that it would continue to insist on exempting rice under a bilateral free trade deal. ``Rice should be excluded."
• South Korea and the United States recently failed to resolve the dispute over U.S. beef imports, which Washington said could threaten the free trade pact.
– Exceprt: New York Times 2/21/07
Free Trade Agreements: NAFTA• NAFTA: A 3-way treaty between US,
Canada, Mexico• Reduced tariffs & removed some investment barriers• Caused worries of huge unemployment in US…
• NAFTA Consequences:• US: 140,000 textile jobs lost to Mexico; but more jobs
created in other industries• Canada: significant job losses (500,000?) mostly due
to increased imports from US• Mexico: 600,000 new textile jobs; growth of
maqiladora factories; Mostly offset by other job losses– Imports & investment from US increased
• Not as good a supporters hoped; not as bad as opponents feared…
Free Trade Agreements: WTO• The GATT & WTO: dozens of countries sitting
down together every few years to negotiate• WTO is a ‘formalization’ of the GATT (General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade) in 1995
– Ex: “Uruguay Rounds” refer to a series of meetings of 123 countries from 1986-94• Agreement on big reduction on tarrifs for most of world
– Ex: “Doha Round” of negotiations• Initiated in 2001 in Doha, Qatar. Still ongoing.• Intended goal: address concerns of poor countries• Talks stalled in part because poor countries have taken
a stand against US/EU agricultural subsidies
WTO: Doha Round
Problems With Trade Agreements• Rich/powerful countries have advantages in
negotiating trade agreements– See: Stiglitz, Chapter 3 (optional section of reading)
• Some points to consider:
• 1. Advantages of Rich/powerful countries are biggest in bi-lateral trade negotiations
• Example: US vs. a small Latin American country• US can bully, bring great pressure…• Often, those turn out worse for poor countries than large
multilateral agreements.
Problems With Trade Agreements• 2. Rich/powerful countries disproportionately
control the agenda of agreements• “The United States and Europe have perfected the art
of arguing for free trade, while simultaneously working for trade agreements that protect themselves against imports from developing countries.” Stiglitz Ch 3 p. 78.
• Topics addressed by FTAs benefit rich countries– Ex: focus has been on removing barriers for high-value goods
& investment, not farm products or low-tech stuff
• And, rich countries are savvy at using dispute resolution procedures
– They have lots of lawyers, using technicalities to block imports.
Problems With Trade Agreements• 3. Government trade negotiators are often
influenced by powerful groups• Rather than negotiating for terms that will benefit
everyone in a country, negotiators may cater to big corporations
• Example: Suppose Guatemala is negotiating over a tariff that limits big business, but protects jobs?
– Companies may push the government to get rid of the tariff, even if many workers will be harmed…
Stiglitz: Making Trade Fair• Stiglitz, Chapter 3: Recommendations
– 1. Developing countries should be treated differently from wealthy countries• Previously, most trade agreements focused on equal
treatment, but poor countries can’t really compete…
– 1. A. So, rich countries should simply open their economies to the poorest countries
– This would have a much bigger effect than providing direct aid– NOTE: Europe has started moving in this direction
– 1. B. Poor countries should be allowed to use subsidies to support “infant industries”• Rich countries have little to lose… but benefits are big.
Stiglitz: Recommendations:• 2. Rich countries should eliminate agricultural
subsidies
Stiglitz: Recommendations:• 2. Rich countries should eliminate agricultural
subsidies– Rich countries give huge amounts of money to
(mainly) industrial farms» Or purchase agricultural products to keep profits up
• EU spends >50 billion US$; US spends $20 billion/year • Norway: two-thirds of farm income is from subsidies
– Original purpose was to stabilize food supply– Now congress & agro-industry lobbyists support them
– Result: Farmers in rich countries can sell food at LOW prices and still make a profit• Often below the cost of farmers in poor countries• Farmers in poor countries can’t compete… go broke.
Stiglitz: Recommendations• 3. Escalating tariffs should be ended
• Escalating tariffs: taxing manufactured products at higher rates than raw materials
– Ex: Having no tariffs on raw agricultural goods, but high tariffs on higher-value processed goods
– No tax on apples; high tax on applesauce
• Issue: This prevents poor countries from industrializing– They are stuck farming– While rich countries have cheap source of produce for their
high-value industries.
Stiglitz: Recommendations• 4. Remove barriers to unskilled services &
migration• Rich countries have pushed to remove barriers for high-
tech services (banking, accounting, software)• Barriers remain in low-skill services
– Example: Shipping/trucking. Foreign companies aren’t allowed
• This is one area that poor countries could actually compete…
• Also, allowing more labor flows would provide a huge benefit to poor countries.
Stiglitz: Recommendations• 5. Restrict the use of non-tariff barriers
• There are legitimate reasons for having them… • BUT, more often they are used by rich countries to
protect their own markets – Despite claims of supporting free trade
• 6. Restrict bi-lateral agreements• They are rarely advantageous to poor countries
– Due to asymmetry in power between negotiators
• And, they tend to undermine multilateral agreements
Stiglitz: Recommendations• 7. Reform governance
• Change the rules of organizations like the WTO• Issues (p. 97):
– How decisions get made– What gets put on the agenda– How disagreements are resolved– How rules are enforced
• Currently, rules sometimes favor rich countries• System should be more open/transparent, more
democratic, with better enforcement for small countries.