One reason I don't talk about politics all that much, and don't talk about economic matters very much at all, is that they're mostly too complex to deal with in a blog post. I think almost all the contending factions have at least some part of the truth, and generally find myself wanting to argue with anyone who seems to think he's gotten hold of the one idea that explains everything.
But this is not to say that all ideas and insights are of equal importance. This short piece by Pat Buchanan in The American Conservative does not fully explain the difficulties of the American middle class, but it is an important part of the story. In a nutshell, he says that the movement of American manufacturing to places where labor is much cheaper has put millions of American workers out of work or into much lower-paying jobs. This seems pretty obviously true. And he thinks we made a big mistake in allowing this to happen, and I'm inclined to agree with him there.
And yet to stop with saying, as Buchanan does, that "capital crushed labor" does not take into account some of the most significant forces at work in the process. One of these, and perhaps the most important, is that most Americans consented to and participated in it, by means of their eager purchasing of cheap foreign-made goods. Just as the voters of a democratic nation are ultimately responsible for the quality of their government, so the consumers in a market economy are ultimately responsible for the businesses that provide them with goods and services. It isn't only the manufacturers, distributors, and retailers who look for the cheapest suppliers. It's all of us.
I see this complaint about the loss of good-paying American manufacturing jobs all the time, and, like I said, I think there's a great deal of validity in it. But how many of us would actually be willing to pay the higher price for, say, a DVD player or a mobile phone, that would be required to support American workers manufacturing those things? Higher prices and, sad to say, quite likely lower quality: look at the way Detroit failed for decades to match the Japanese auto manufacturers in quality. I think we know the answer, because"Buy American" campaigns seem to fail almost completely.
In economics as well as in politics, the search for the sources of many of our problems has to include a look in the mirror.
Leave a reply to Janet Cancel reply