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EPI has this factual missive (pdf file)
relating to NAFTA and Ohio, in light of the campaign heating up on the
topic. The entire piece is below the fold ("read more").
EPI Research Summary:
Trade Policys impact on jobs and wages in Ohio and nationally
Robert Scott
February 29, 2008
After NAFTA took effect in 1994, growing U.S. trade deficits with
Mexico and Canada through 2004 eliminated a net total of more than 1
million jobs in the United States, and most of those jobs were in the
manufacturing sector (65%, 659,000 jobs). Source: NAFTA Revisited by
Robert Scott.
The United States trade deficit with Mexico in autos and auto parts
increased from $2 billion in 1993 to $31 billion in 2007 (in constant
2007 dollars). The growth in the deficit in this industry alone has
eliminated almost 366,000 jobs in the U.S. in this period. Source: Ohio
Voters and Candidates Take a Dim View of NAFTA by Ross Eisenbrey.
Manufacturing and other trade-related jobs offer better pay and
benefits than jobs in non-traded industries. The jobs displaced by
NAFTA would have paid, on average more than $800 per week, while the
average job in the rest of the economy paid only $683 per week. Thus,
the displacement of 1 million jobs from traded to non-traded goods
industries reduced wage payment to U.S. workers by $7.6 billion in 2004
alone. Source: NAFTA Revisited.
In 2006, the impact of trade flows increased the inequality of earnings
by roughly 7%, with the resulting loss to a representative household
(two earners making the median wage and working the average amount of
(household) hours each year) reaching more than $2,000. This amount
rivals the entire annual federal income tax bill paid by this
household. Source: Globalization and American Wages by Josh Bivens.
In Ohio, increased trade deficits after NAFTA was enacted displaced
about 50,000 jobs between 1993 and 2004, the fifth highest job loss
total among the U.S. states, in terms of the number of jobs lost, and
as a share of state employment. Ohio is one of only two states that
have suffered a net loss in total jobs since March, 1998 (Michigan is
the other), and one of only four states that have failed to experience
a recovery in employment since the 2001 recession (Massachusetts,
Illinois and Michigan are the others). Source: NAFTA Revisited and The
Importance of Manufacturing by Rob Scott
Between 1993 and 2002, the U.S. Department of Labor certified that 75
plants in Ohio, employing more than 12,000 workers were closed due to
shifts in production to Mexico and/or Canada. Source: Public Citizens
NAFTA-TAA (U.S. Dept. of Labor certified plant closings) database.
Professor Susan Helper of Case Western Reserve University in Cleveland
reports that last week another manufacturer announced a plant closing
in the state of Ohio, the 82nd in the last twelve months. This time it
was Johnson Rubber, a 113-year old maker of floor mats and rubber boots
for steering columns. Source: Helper op-ed, forthcoming. WARN database.
Job loss due to increased trade deficits after NAFTAs enactment
reduced wage payments to Ohio workers by at least $370 million in 2004
alone (Ohios share of the $7.6 billion in total U.S. losses in wage
payments). Source: NAFTA Revisited.
Between 2001 and 2006, Ohio ranked 48th and 34th, respectively, out of
the 50 states in total and per capita GDP growth. Source: Bureau of
Economic Analysis, Gross Domestic Product by State.
NAFTA has harmed workers in Mexico and Canada as well, as workers have
been forced into a race-to-the-bottom in wages. Real hourly wages for
manufacturing workers in Mexico fell 12% between 1993 and 2006, and a
million jobs were lost in Mexican corn production in the 1990s. Source:
Bureau of Labor Statistics and International Monetary Fund,
International Financial Statistics, and NAFTA Revisited.
NAFTA became the prototype for hundreds of corporate-backed trade deals
negotiated by the Clinton and Bush administrations, including the
formation of the WTO in 1994 and Chinas WTO accession in 2001. Job
losses from China have now overwhelmed those from NAFTAthe $230
billion U.S. trade deficit with China in 2006 displaced 2.7 million
U.S. jobs. Source: Costly Trade with China by Robert Scott
The growth in U.S. trade deficits since 1998 is responsible for a large
share of the loss of 3.7 million U.S. manufacturing jobs, plus hundreds
of thousands of supporting, trade-related jobs in other, high-wage
industries such as software, legal, engineering and accounting
services. Job losses in manufacturing have not occurred because of any
acceleration in productivity growth in recent years. Source:
Manufacturing Job Loss: Productivity is not the Culprit by Robert
Scott. Growing trade deficits explained at least a third (roughly a
million) of the loss of manufacturing jobs through 2004. Source: Trade
Deficits and Job-Loss in Manufacturing: Correlation and Causality by
Josh Bivens.
Reversing the damage done by globalization and NAFTA-type trade deals
to workers in the United States and other countries demands a
comprehensive strategy that is of sufficient scale and scope to respond
to the global challenge, including:
o
Trade strategies that put working people first.
o
Increasing investment in people (e.g. Danish model of active labor
market policies, with public expenditures of 2-5% of GDP, equivalent to
$300-$700 billion in the U.S. economy).
o
Increasing investment in people, infrastructure, and new technologies
to enhance competitiveness, including clean energy technologies.
o
Restoring the lost bargaining position of workers (e.g. card check and
the Employee Free Choice Act, and recognition of ILO core labor
standards).
o
Building the foundation for a global social contract to ensure health
care, pensions and universal unemployment insurance for all workers.
Source: Globalization that Works for Working Americans by Jeff Faux.
We should begin by reforming NAFTA. Incorporation of enforceable labor
and environmental standards is an essential starting point, but much
more is required to ensure rising living standards for workers in all
three countries. We can begin by examining NAFTAs impacts on Mexico,
where imports of highly subsidized U.S. grains undercut Mexicos rural
economy and drove 2 million family farmers off the land. With lack of
enforceable labor standards, falling wages and no jobs in the cities,
they swelled the migrant stream north, so that after NAFTA, illegal
immigration doubled. The Mexican government predicts that out-migration
to the U.S. will continue at 500,000 per year for the next 15 years.
The U.S. and Canada should back a development fund to generate job
growth in Mexico which will support an increase in education and other
social spending, and investments in schools, the environment and other
critically needed, job-generating infrastructure projects. Source:
Overhauling NAFTA by Jeff Faux.
If the U.S. seeks to re-negotiate NAFTA, Mexico and Canada will also
have a list of reforms that they would like to achieve. Immigration
Reform will be high on the list for both the U.S. and Mexico, and
should be included in a new NAFTA. Immigration reform should find ways
to authorize the flows and make immigration an integral component of
economic and social policies. Effective immigration policy must contain
a comprehensive mix of measures, including: a) stronger border controls
and internal enforcement processes; b) a secure work authorization
system with strong penalties against employer and immigrant violators;
c) a means to adjust the status of people who have lived and worked
satisfactorily in the United States for some years, accompanied by a
credible signal that there are unlikely to be future status
adjustments; d) an immigration standard that gives greater weight to the
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