Much Ado About NAFTA

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Previously filed under: North America, Trade
As November approaches both Democratic hopefuls are pointing fingers at NAFTA-- but what is really to blame for American job losses?
Photo Credit: Lindsay Beyerstein, Flickr
To what degree can the Democratic candidates really blame NAFTA for American job losses? Photo Credit: Lindsay Beyerstein, Flickr
In state after state, the economy trumps national security in the concerns of both Republicans and Democrats voting in presidential nominating contests. Residents of few states, though, can compare to Ohio in their mistrust of trade agreements as the cause of economic problems. The Midwestern state, which will vote in party primaries on March 4, has lost more than a quarter of a million manufacturing jobs in the last eight years. Median income has dropped more than 10 percent in that time. In this climate, notes the Columbus Dispatch, "nothing resonates better with blue-collar Democrats in Ohio than the idea that wealthy manufacturers have taken advantage of trade agreements to move their production facilities abroad."
Residents of few states, though, can compare to Ohio in their mistrust of trade agreements as the cause of economic problems.




So it's little surprise that Democratic candidates Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton have racheted up their "fair trade" rhetoric (WashPost) ahead of the Ohio vote. But their vehemence in attacking the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has raised eyebrows among some economists and trade experts. Clinton has aggressively defended herself against Obama's assertions that she was a NAFTA booster. "You know, I have been a critic of NAFTA
Many economic analysts believe the focus on NAFTA is misplaced. To New York Times columnist David Leonhardt, the candidates' calls for tougher labor and environment standards are silly. "They call the country's trade policy a disaster, and yet their plan to fix it starts with, um, cracking down on Mexican pollution," he writes. Ned Hill of Cleveland State University tells NPR that Ohio's economic woes are not the fault of NAFTA but "because of the failed strategy of three companies"—Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors. The latter has been supplanted as the state's main employer by Wal-Mart. Syndicated columnist Froma Harrop asserts U.S. voters should not be blaming NAFTA for manufacturing job losses (RealClearPolitics) but China's entrance into the World Trade Organization. She notes that the U.S. trade deficit with China is three times as large as it is with Mexico.

What's important now...is for the Democratic candidates to better articulate how they would "restore the economic security" of the U.S. middle class.


NAFTA has amassed a mixed record since it came into force in 1994, a Congressional Budget Office report found after its first decade. A CFR Task Force in 2005 said NAFTA has "transformed Mexico, but it has also deepened and made much more visible the divisions that exist in the country." Some economists note that illegal immigration from Mexico to the United States has increased since NAFTA took effect (NYT).

What's important now, say trade watchdogs like Lori Wallach, head of the U.S.-based Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch, is for the Democratic candidates to better articulate how they would "restore the economic security" of the U.S. middle class. In this regard, says the New York Times' Leonhardt, Obama and Clinton have come up with good ideas about investing in infrastructure, science, and alternative energy. And they are joined by the front-running Republican presidential candidate, Sen. John McCain, in supporting beefed-up Trade Adjustment Assistance, seen as crucial in helping U.S. workers displaced by trade. McCain, however, voted for NAFTA in 1994.




Toni Johnson is a staff writer at the Council on Foreign Relations. Reprinted with permission from cfr.org.

To read another Global Envision article about NAFTA, see Workers Suffer Continent-Wide Under NAFTA.



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Comments

I agree with the point that the Big Three's strategy has been less than ideal, however our local, state, and govenments need to share the blame for the loss of manufacturing jobs to low cost regions such such as China, India, and SE Asia. Corporate greed has little do with it as Clinton or Obama would like everyone to believe; the real reason jobs are being shipped overseas is it has become cost prohibitive to conduct business in the US and remain competitive in a global economy. The US has the 2nd highest tax structure in the world and Ohio (according to CNN Money) has the fifth highest state tax burden in the nation. Until we address the cost of doing business in the US we are going to continue to see jobs that have traditionally supported the middle class flow across our international borders, NAFTA or no NAFTA. The proposed policies of Clinton and Obama are only going to exacerbate the issue; they will fail msierably at stimulating the economy. The idea of raising taxes for corp


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