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Mexico Got the Shafta from NAFTA

By Todd Tucker, Eyes on Trade. Posted April 4, 2008.


Mexico stands to lose an amount equal to 3 percent of their GDP due to the over-reliance on the U.S. export market.

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Gabriel Palma is one of the best progressive economists in the world. Originally hailing from Chile, he decamped to Cambridge, currently serving as one of the few Keynesians that the neoliberals that took over his department haven't kicked out. I was in his class for about a week, before I realized that in order to take graduate econometrics, you must know something about math and statistics. At that point, after spending my undergraduate years fighting the man rather than taking the tougher classes, I decided to further postpone the learning. As I take night classes these days, I am kicking myself for not having bitten the bullet while it would have been easier.

Oh well. That doesn't stop me (or you) from getting your learn on with Gabriel's work on NAFTA and Mexico. The paper is a few years old, but it remains one of the better expositions of what went down before and since NAFTA went into effect. Among his findings:

  • Just nine countries account for 90 percent of manufactured exports from developing countries. Mexico is the only one of these to thoroughly go through the neoliberal ringer, courtesy of NAFTA and NAFTA-like policy changes.
  • Oil used to dominate Mexico's exports, but now manufacturing (increasingly high technology) constitutes the vast majority.
  • Like here at home, Mexican wages are scarcely above their 1980s' levels -- whether you're looking at the maquila or non-maquila sectors. In the maquilas, you didn't have to pay anyone much of anything, since there was a bottomless pool of rural Mexicans separately getting displaced by Mexico's agriculture rules.
  • Unlike here, where bubbles and debt made up for the loss of demand brought on by the trade deficit, Mexico used export growth to make up for the loss of demand brought on by wage stagnation.
  • The traditional non-export manufacturing sectors have not seen hardly any increase in investment, meaning that the maquilas (which attracted tons of FDI) did not feed back into other sectors of the economy.
  • It turned out to be a weak substitute for real growth, however, since value added in the maquilas and auto sectors remains about where it was before NAFTA, despite the massive increase in both maquila exports and imports.
  • From just 2001-2002, 545 maquilas left Mexico for China, shedding hundreds of thousands of Mexican jobs. So much for that experiment. But as my colleague Carlos Salas shows in an upcoming paper, the few workers that got to keep their jobs have seen their wages bid up somewhat. And with absolutely none of this background, we can now see the Bush administration taking credit for the momentary respite from hell. Oh joy! A rounded development policy proposal is just around the corner, I. Am. Sure.

Now, as Rev. Jeremiah Wright might say, the chickens are coming home to roost. As CEPR documents in a recent paper, Mexico stands to lose an amount equal to 3 percent of their GDP due to the over-reliance on the U.S. export market (bloated to massive deficits), which will now come crashing down thanks to our recession.

Sustainable growth, anyone?

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See more stories tagged with: mexico, debt, nafta, keynesian, wage stagnation, sustainable growth

Todd Tucker is research director with Public Citizen's Global Trade Watch.

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Open Borders will RAISE Wages by Making Global Employers Compete for Workers World Wide.
Posted by: yellow on Apr 6, 2008 9:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is important to open our borders so as to not lock third world workers into low wage countries and allow outmigration to create labor shortages overseas causing foreign wages to rise and the First World/Third World wage gap to narrow to the point that it slows the offshoring of manufacturing employment. In addition, the unionization of sectors where migrants are employed could mean higher wages for all workers as well as more economic growth through increased consumer demand. Higher growth will sustain wage levels through demand for labor.

Economic expansion will increase the need for workers and sustain wage levels better than will recessionary, anti-inflation policies that create unemployment and overall downward pressure on wages. Periods of high immigration to the US have also coincided with rising wages especially if strongly pro-union policies are in place. There is no necessary correlation between open borders and low wages. Several general trends in the macro-economy play a more determining role in relative wage levels.

Locking low wage workers out of the US will only dampen wages in Mexico and elsewhere in the third world making these countries more appealing to transnational corporations for offshoring production and jobs. Open borders removes the gaurantee of a captive, low wage labor force for employers in the third world and could have the effect of raising wages globally and actually saving US jobs.

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