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Blame NAFTA

By David Morris, AlterNet. Posted April 13, 2006.


Thanks to NAFTA's success, the flood of illegal immigration is up and the standard of living of the average Mexican is down.
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The debate about illegal immigration rarely mentions NAFTA. That's regrettable, since the flood of undocumented Mexicans in 2006 empirically challenges the economic philosophy that guided NAFTA's design.

The slogan of those who championed a North American Free Trade Agreement was, "Trade, not aid." NAFTA would solve our problems, they insisted, with little or no transfer of funds from richer Canadians and Americans to poorer Mexicans. By raising Mexican living standards and wage levels, Attorney General Janet Reno predicted NAFTA would reduce illegal immigration by up to two-thirds in six years. "NAFTA is our best hope for reducing illegal migration in the long haul," Reno declared in 1994. "If it fails, effective immigration control will become impossible."

Well, NAFTA succeeded, at least on its own terms. As Jaime Serra Puche, Mexico's former trade minister and chief NAFTA negotiator maintained in 2004, "When you look at NAFTA in terms of what NAFTA was made for, which were trade flows, investment flows, and in general technological transfer and so on, you can say that NAFTA has been a successful enterprise."

Trade volume has soared, from about 30 percent of Mexico's Gross Domestic Product in 1990, to about 55 percent in 2005. Foreign investment has increased by over 225 percent. Yes. When you look at NAFTA in terms of what NAFTA was intended to do, based on what those who wrote it said it was intended to do, it has been a smashing success.

At this point bringing up an old medical adage might be appropriate: "The surgery was successful, but the patient died." NAFTA achieved its intended goals. But the flood of illegal immigration is up, and the standard of living of the average Mexican is down.

Real wages for most Mexicans are lower than when NAFTA took effect. And Mexican wages are diverging from, rather than converging with U.S. wages, despite the fact that Mexican worker productivity has increased dramatically. From 1993 to 2003, worker productivity rose by 60 percent. In the same period, real wages declined by 5 percent.

As NAFTA intended, Mexico has become an export-dependent economy. But this has not benefited most Mexicans. Sandra Polaski of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace points out that Mexican manufacturing is increasingly based on a production model in which component parts are imported, then processed or assembled and then reexported. In the maquiladora sector, which accounts for most exports, 97 percent of components are imported; only 3 percent are produced in Mexico. The spillover effect of such operations on the broader economy is very limited.

Ironically, one could argue that illegal migration is the only thing saving Mexico from the ravages of NAFTA and preventing it from collapsing into economic and social chaos.

Illegal migration serves as an important safety valve. In the past 10 years, Mexico's working age population increased by a little over 1 million per year, but the number of jobs expanded by only half as much. The annual exodus of 500,000 to 1 million Mexicans keeps unemployment to at least manageable levels.


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David Morris is co-founder and vice president of the Institute for Local Self Reliance in Minneapolis, Minn., and director of its New Rules project.

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NAFTA has only brought prosperty
Posted by: Bobsays on Apr 13, 2006 3:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
When NAFTA first started, the left was deeply opposed. They said it would suck jobs out of the economy. The most vicious critics were in Canada. All these yeasr later and Canada has made a fortune from NAFTA, and now trades 80 per cent f its economy with the US. Canada's declining rust-bucket economy has been revived. Its unemployment rate pushed back down; its economy modernised. For an example of the new Canadian economy emerging, look at RIM, the Blackberry dudes who are doing so well.

As for Mexico, it could have been like this too. But Mexico chose to ignore corruption and eschew the opportunities before them. They should not have just relied on the tax free zones to generate jobs. That was just the bare minimum the US was willing to do to help Mexico. Mexico should have had a homegrown plan to modernise and advance the economy. Tackling their poor should have been priority one.

Instead, as always, they have turned to the US like an errant child, hoping for some pocket money so they can buy some weed.

It is no substitute for taking responsibility. Keep in mind, Mexico could have become as rich as Canada and Australia if it had behaved differently. All those lost opportunities will not be reclaimed by a Mexican Chavez of Castro. Look to Europe or Canada, Mexico!

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Too bad Sense-LESS-brenner and his gang never attack "free trade"
Posted by: maxpayne on Apr 13, 2006 5:32 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
No wonder you don't see Wall-Mart or most of its anti-worker corporate ilk going against the bill passed by the House.

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The correct perspective on illegal immigration
Posted by: zooeyhall on Apr 13, 2006 6:13 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
At last, Alternet finally takes a chance and looks at illegal immigration as an ECONOMIC issue, as opposed to the "rednecks-who-don't-appreciate-multiculture-heaven" approach to those who want legal and controlled immigration.

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China
Posted by: brunowe on Apr 13, 2006 6:33 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
How much of the problem with Mexican exports has to do with the rise of China as a low-cost exporter? Also, Mexico is still a moderate corrupt country (3.5 on Transparency Int'ls Corruption Perceptions Index on a scale of 0 (most corrupt) to 10.

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» RE: China Posted by: Sojourner
The most important point
Posted by: jsquire on Apr 13, 2006 6:39 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The EU realized from the beginning that you can't have a community unless you lift the poorest up."

This is the single most important point when comparing the US to other economies. Most other cultures, Europe among them, actually value community in some way and it is part of the decision-making process. In the USA, only the bottom line counts. Whether it builds or destroys communities is irrelevant. A lot of people in this country think there's something fundamentally wrong with our society -- we on the left think one way, the ultra-religious think another way, and the broad middle has a gnawing unnamed feeling that things just aren't right. We're all reacting to the same thing, which is that our system reduces us to numbers, cogs in a machine, and destroys our humanity.

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» RE: The most important point Posted by: ALANHESTER
NAFTA has brought prosperity, if you are the plantation master
Posted by: thoughtcriminal on Apr 13, 2006 7:58 AM   
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Take look at what has happened to well-paying blue collar jobs across the US: they've all moved to Mexico, where employees get paid $10 a day for ten-hour days with no benefits at all. Well, this is great for labor costs for an electronics firm, but there is a long-term problem:

Who is going to be buying the product? Cheap foreign factory labor is all very well; access to foreign oil reserves is very important, and with financial services to tie it all together we can keep on going like this indefinitely, right?

Wrong! The financial sector in the US is a house of cards, and all it will take to bring it down is a massive disruption in the international oil markets. What happens if the dollar plummets - I mean what do we actually do in this country anymore other then offer financial services - and even there, the work is being taken over by call centers in India. The notion that the entire industrial sector could be shipped offshore to Mexico and China was idiotic. I suppose we should be grateful to Toyota for building production facilities here... while Ford moves to Mexico for the cheap labor.

Of course, it is worth remembering that Clinton championed NAFTA as much as the Rebulicans did. Let's not have another Clinton Democratic candidate in 2008, please.

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Farmers from southern Mexico are key too
Posted by: historystudent on Apr 13, 2006 8:02 AM   
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The article doesn't mention the massive displacement of Mexican corn farmers by cheaper, American subsidized corn from the US under NAFTA rules. Many former farmers can't compete and are forced into migrant labor, and many try to immigrate. Adding to this problem is the worrisome loss of biodiversity in Mexican corn and the unintended integration of GM corn to Mexican crops. This is also going on with pork, (and probably other agricultural production as well on a smaller scale).

It's sad that the economic and social impacts of our factory farm system of food production are being exported, with the predictable effects on health and welfare.

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don't blame NAFTA; blame the overclass that perpetrated "free trade"
Posted by: cry0fan on Apr 13, 2006 9:44 AM   
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this is what is so frustrating about American political activists--you pick out one small part of the problem and mistake it for the whole problem. It is the overclass that acts contrary to the interests of working class Americans that is to blame for NAFTA and its associated problems. You guys are like a mechanic that wants to put some valve quieting goop in an engine when the engine actually needs a valve job!

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As usual, after the fact
Posted by: Habaro on Apr 13, 2006 10:47 AM   
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NAFTA has long enough been a reality and now so is CAFTA (repercussions pending) with the FTAA in tow...thanks, in part, to Alternet by ignoring it until its too late. Like a cop needs a criminal, clearly your website needs turmoil.

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It's the Shaft
Posted by: jeffrey7 on Apr 13, 2006 3:22 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NAFTA,CAFTA and all the other afta's mean only one thing. The very Rich of the World will get richer while they move from Country to Country, finding their equally corrupt and greedy counterparts, and give the People the SHAFTA.
The People of the Planet are 'fodder' for the Greedy. Govts
of the World set up bogus 'Trade' deals and kill us off with their bullshit wages,total lack of regard for the environment and a sense of 'NON-RESPONSIBILITY' for the ruined health of all the People. Ity's time we quit giving in to businesses,govts,and sellouts. There is no substitute for true Freedom and Liberty. All the 'afta's' do is create new slavery.

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Where's the data?
Posted by: davcrock on Apr 13, 2006 3:39 PM   
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Over and over again on alternet, I keep hearing about this economic phenomenon or that economic issue but I do not see hard data just the hand waving of supposed analysts. You say that illegal immigration is up. Great. Give me a chart. You say wages are down in mexico. Great. Give me statistics. Even better, give me statistics by region. You say American blue collar jobs are moving south. Great. Give me statistics.

All I read on alternet is a constant cacophony of "the sky is falling." I read about America is falling apart, about how our economy is about to nose dive; yet I do not see any models that justify this assertion.

Justify your statements.

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» Look it up Posted by: beausoleil
» RE: Where's the data? Posted by: Phenix
NAFTA
Posted by: gonzomax on Apr 13, 2006 5:19 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
NAFTA was a good idea but the businessmen set it up in the end.If we had brought up wages,working conditions and enforced environmental standards as promised,it would have worked. There are no teeth in enforcement and without penalties business will exploit. They have.The only winners are the businesses in Mexico and the businessmen in America who got access to cheap labor.The workers in both countries get lower wages and worse working conditions.

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Locust Corporations
Posted by: beausoleil on Apr 13, 2006 5:45 PM   
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Corporations are the locusts of our era. They devour everything with insatiable appetites, as they've now just done to the United States, leaving our environment a wasteland, our people sick both mentally and physically, our great grandparents self sufficient lifestyles forgotten, the dollar soon to be worthless, our artwork and music generally degraded. Now the locusts move on into Mexico and any other place that hasn't been exploited to desolation.

The migration of workers may save us, however, but only if we stop allowing ourselves to be manipulated by the media into thinking that people of other nations or religions are our enemies.

All people of all nations are brothers and sisters and it's time for all of us to demand our rightful inheritance: our fair share of the planet earth. The locusts are fueled by our lifestyles, our ignorance, our investments and our apathy. Stop feeding the locusts, and the locusts will die. Live simply, love your neighbor, take one day off of work to simply thank the heavens for giving us such an awesome planet to live on.

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Only Scratching the Surface
Posted by: StuartH on Apr 14, 2006 12:16 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If Alternet is supposed to be an alternative to the mainstream media, then articles like this begin to look in the right direction, but it is only scratching the surface.

Anyone ever hear of loan syndications? This is something that the largest 10 banks are given the ability to do. No one bank can loan out more than some small percentage of their entire capital, so loans are syndicated with as many as 40 or 50 small Savings and Loan institutions participating in the deal. The amounts range from a hundred million or so to over a billion. This has been going on since at least the early 1970s, so most of the banks in the US, and most of the savings, retirement funds, or stocks in them, are involved in this.

What the banks are doing is only a part of the picture. But the point is, that the flood of immigrants into the US are at least in part, a phenomenon caused by US financial dealings - especially when they are backed up by the US military which has punished the peoples of Latin and South America quite severely for making democratic choices that are the "wrong" choices over the years. We must face up to this.

When we see a lot of people coming up from the south, they haven't just popped into existence at the border for no reason.

Our international financial policies, our military interventions that have provoked a lot of havoc over the past century, and our tendency to ignore what's going on in the world makes things worse.

A progressive policy that reduces the exodus and creates a more sustainable basis for long term stability in the Americas
would involve looking at what is driving this to start with. Congress needs to take an honest, unblinking look at what the corporate sector is doing. We could use a President who isn't using the Patron system of the Rio Grande valley as his model.

NAFTA and CAFTA are only pieces of the big picture puzzle.

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http://www.ontheissues.org/Celeb/Bill_Clinton_Free_Trade.htm
Posted by: dlf on Apr 14, 2006 4:12 AM   
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Support NAFTA & GATT: build bridges, not walls
We don’t need to build walls, we need to build bridges. We don’t need protection, we need opportunity. But in a world of stiff competition we also need more than free trade. We need fair trade with fair rules.
That’s why I fought for NAFTA, which effectively opened Mexico’s and Canada’s markets to American products, and for GATT, which is helping to level the playing field for American companies abroad.


In all, since 1992 we have negotiated more than 200 trade agreements-21 with Japan alone.

Source: Between Hope and History, by Bill Clinton, p. 34-35 Jan 1, 1996

I noticed the writer went to great pains not to remind the readers who pushed for NAFTA. The Republicrat hybrid
named Bill Clinton. There is a reason he is comfortable hanging out with the Bush family.

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The real cause of our woes.
Posted by: monkeywrench on Apr 14, 2006 10:59 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
"The EU realized from the beginning that you can't have a community unless you lift the poorest up."

Excellent point; and it is why, when surveyed, Europeans are, on average, happier and less stressed than Americans. I cannot list all of the times when I have heard solutions to problems coming from Europe that make far more sense than what we do here.

NAFTA is a prime example of how our short-sightedness and love for the Almighty Dollar can screw things up: instead of really caring for the health of the member nations, we ram-rodded this "free-trade agreement" through with a heavy hammer attached – and one of the hammer-blows was to regard Mexico as furtile ground for ultra-cheap manufacturing labor – and when that labor is no longer competitive, we "pull up stakes" and head for some cheaper nation (God help us if they ever teach monkeys how to assemble things...). Ergo, the standard of living falls in Mexico, more come across the border (to drive down domestic labor rates by being paid under-the-table in many cases), and american businesses, including Big Business (Wal Mart got busted for using illegals for its store clean-up crews), reaps profits on the backs of exploited immigrants. Nice deal for the top 1%, huh? They skip away with the reward of record corporate profits (and the hefty bonuses that go with them), and the bottom 99% fight it out with immigrants for the scraps.

Gee, I wonder what would happen if those (those?...ahem...us) 99%'ers realize how they're being screwed and join with immigrants to really go after the actual reason for their common plight – corporate greed supported by crooked governments (including our own)? It wouldn't be a pretty sight. And who knows, maybe the "unwashed masses" will, after all those interest-only loans and refi's that have artificially supported our economy come due and create a tidal wave of foreclosures, (now punished) bankruptcies and further job losses. Maybe we should listen to the Europeans and act responsibly before things turn ugly.

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