[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
International News Title: The GOP And The Trans-Pacific Partnership: On a Fast Track to National Ruin In the first quarter of 2015, in the sixth year of the historic Obama recovery, the U.S. economy grew by two-tenths of 1 percent. And that probably sugarcoats it. For trade deficits subtract from the growth of GDP, and the U.S. trade deficit that just came in was a monster. As the APs Martin Crutsinger writes, The U.S. trade deficit in March swelled to the highest level in more than six years, propelled by a flood of imports that may have sapped the U.S. economy of any growth in the first quarter. The March deficit was $51.2 billion, largest of any month since 2008. In goods alone, the trade deficit hit $64 billion. As Crutsinger writes, a surge in imports to $239 billion in March, reflected greater shipments of foreign-made industrial machinery, autos, mobile phones, clothing and furniture. What does this flood of imports of things we once made here mean for a city like, say, Baltimore? Writes columnist Allan Brownfeld: Baltimore was once a city where tens of thousands of blue collar employees earned a good living in industries building cars, airplanes and making steel.
In 1970, about a third of the labor force in Baltimore was employed in manufacturing. By 2000, only 7 percent of city residents had manufacturing jobs. Put down blue-collar Baltimore alongside Motor City, Detroit, as another fatality of free-trade fanaticism. For as imports substitute for U.S. production and kill U.S. jobs, trade deficits reduce a nations GDP. And since Bill Clinton took office, the U.S. trade deficits have totaled $11.2 trillion. An astronomical figure. It translates not only into millions of manufacturing jobs lost and tens of thousands of factories closed, but also millions of manufacturing jobs that were never created, and tens of thousands of factories that did not open here, but did open in Mexico, China and other Asian countries. In importing all those trillions in foreign-made goods, we exported the future of Americas young. Our political and corporate elites sold out working- and middle-class America to enrich the monied class. And they sure succeeded. Yet, remarkably, Republicans who wail over Obamas budget deficits ignore the more ruinous trade deficits that leech away the industrial base upon which Americas self-reliance and military might have always depended. Last month, the U.S. trade deficit with the Peoples Republic of China reached $31.2 billion, the largest in history between two nations. Over 25 years, China has amassed $4 trillion in trade surpluses at our expense. And where are the Republicans? Talking tough about building new fleets of planes and ships and carriers to defend Asia from the rising threat of China, which those same Republicans did more than anyone else to create. Now this GOP Congress is preparing to vote for fast track and surrender its right to amend any Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal that Obama brings home. But consider that TPP. While the propaganda is all about a deal to cover 40 percent of world trade, what are we really talking about? First, TPP will cover 37 percent of world trade. But 80 percent of that is trade between the U.S. and nations with which we already have trade deals. As for the last 20 percent, our new partners will be New Zealand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Brunei and Japan. Query: Who benefits more if we get access to Vietnams market, which is 1 percent of ours, while Hanoi gets access to a U.S. market that is 100 times the size of theirs? The core of the TPP is the deal with Japan. But do decades of Japanese trade surpluses at our expense, achieved through the manipulation of Japans currency and hidden restrictions on U.S. imports, justify a Congressional surrender to Barack Obama of all rights to amend any Japan deal he produces? Columnist Robert Samuelson writes that a TPP failure could produce a historic watershed.
rejection could mean the end of an era.
So, when opponents criticize the Trans-Pacific Partnership, they need to answer a simple question: Compared to what? Valid points, and a fair question. And yes, an era is ending, a post-Cold War era where the United States threw open her markets to nations all over the world, as they sheltered their own. The end of an era where America volunteered to defend nations and fight wars having nothing to do with her own vital interests or national security. The bankruptcy of a U.S. trade and foreign policy, which has led to the transparent decline of the United States and the astonishing rise of China, is apparent now virtually everywhere. And America is not immune to the rising tide of nationalism. Though, like the alcoholic who does not realize his condition until he is lying face down in the gutter, it may be a while before we get out of the empire business and start looking out again, as our fathers did, for the American republic first. But that day is coming.
Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
#1. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
The 27% difference is due to workers having elevated themselves by going off to college to take up black studies and eubonics.
#2. To: rlk (#1)
Robert, I think the biggest cause for the reduction of manufacturing jobs, is the US signing onto all of the one sided trade deals that have encouraged American manufacturers to move their operations overseas. The benefits to the manufacturers were: lower taxes, US Govt financing their move, lower wages, less or no regulations, reduced US import tariffs, etc, etc, etc. It was all engineered and accomplished by the globalist, NWO, CFR crowd, from both D & R party. Traitors all. You are correct that many went to college and got worthless degrees. But the major cause is the declining number of manufacturing, and consequently fewer manufacturing jobs.
Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest |
[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Mail] [Sign-in] [Setup] [Help] [Register]
|