But where is the question. Because it sure as hell isn't in the US. You must not have watched FTAs ravage certain segments of this country. Sure, Mexico improved, much by taking jobs from Americans.
Doesn't logic tell you that business will want to produce for as cheaply as possible, and sell for as much as possible. It's inevitable with free trade that business will take away higher paying jobs and provide lower paying ones, just in countries where that is considered more middle class.
I get the distinct impression a lot of anti-free-trade proponents fail to understand the causality of many of the world's problems. People keep attacking the symptoms, rather than putting their attention towards root causes (like, you know, capitalism itself).
It's particularly noticeable when folks talk about "lost jobs", not understanding that technological unemployment is an inevitability and one that will only increase over the coming decades.
Stuff like the TPP is largely irrelevant when it comes to the big picture. Just a little bump on the road, nothing more. But good luck getting people to see that.
Case in point.
Eventually, those lower-class areas will be developed as well, and eventually corporations will run out of cheap labor to exploit, making all of this moot.
Then they just switch to machine automation entirely, and then everyone can complain about unemployment equally!
But where is the question. Because it sure as hell isn't in the US. You must not have watched FTAs ravage certain segments of this country. Sure, Mexico improved, much by taking jobs from Americans.
Doesn't logic tell you that business will want to produce for as cheaply as possible, and sell for as much as possible. It's inevitable with free trade that business will take away higher paying jobs and provide lower paying ones, just in countries where that is considered more middle class.
So, clearly biased.
Anyway, these partnerships are being discussed in secrecy and what is known so far isn't good for the general populace. It covers tons of different points and is huge, so it is best explained by an expert of a neutral party.
An expert it what, though? I mean, if someone who works in free trade is biased, it can't be a free trade expert.
I've taken no stance on "free trade" and this deal includes way more than just that.The statistics about poverty reduction aren't biased though. Free trade has done more for getting more people into the middle class than any other treaties and agreements in the history of the world.
Well....yes, of course negotiations are done in secrecy. Do you expect the negotiating parties to reveal their hand publicly that might be detrimental to their overall bargaining positioning? I hear this mentioned a lot by anti free traders, that negotiations are done "in secret". But when has any intergovernmental agreement ever been publicly revealed prior to its formulation? Governments draft such international agreements and then they go for ratification in national parliaments once there's something agreed on. Was the drafting process of SALT, START or the Iran Deal released publicly at regular intervals? Of course not.
If the people, via their elected representatives, approve the treaty/accord/FTA then they ratify it. Otherwise they reject it like the US Senate has done with countless international agreements. TPP has been done no differently than most other intergovernmental agreements.
You completely failed to comprehend my post. On any level.Dude, if you think the middle America manufacturing jobs and rust belt jobs were lost due to automation, I would have to say you are pretty ignorant about the subject. ^^Where are people getting this automation BS!! I guess you have to have been there, and know specifically who's job was lost to where. You are believing what the corporations have told you. Think about it, if the jobs simply just vanished, where did all these manufacturing jobs in Mexico/Asia come from? Why did Apple say they would manufacture Iphones in the US and then do it for one year, then send them off to China? It's not automation.
Dude, if you think the middle America manufacturing jobs and rust belt jobs were lost due to automation, I would have to say you are pretty ignorant about the subject. ^^Where are people getting this automation BS!! I guess you have to have been there, and know specifically who's job was lost to where. You are believing what the corporations have told you. Think about it, if the jobs simply just vanished, where did all these manufacturing jobs in Mexico/Asia come from? Why did Apple say they would manufacture Iphones in the US and then do it for one year, then send them off to China? It's not automation.
There have definitely been a a lot of jobs lost directly because of NAFTA. However there are also a lot of small businesses that rely heavily on it. Without NAFTA, a lot of small American businesses would not be able to sell to customers in Canada and Mexico. This is because the duty reduction allows them to compete with local Canadian and Mexican companies.
Overall though the net benefit of NAFTA to our economy is approximately a push. Last I read the overall economic benefit with near neutral with a slight lean towards positive.
Dude, if you think the middle America manufacturing jobs and rust belt jobs were lost due to automation, I would have to say you are pretty ignorant about the subject. ^^Where are people getting this automation BS!! I guess you have to have been there, and know specifically who's job was lost to where. You are believing what the corporations have told you. Think about it, if the jobs simply just vanished, where did all these manufacturing jobs in Mexico/Asia come from? Why did Apple say they would manufacture Iphones in the US and then do it for one year, then send them off to China? It's not automation.
Maybe on a macro level, but what is the affect on the American middle class worker? Dollars in an economy isn't the only measure of health. Has it created more jobs than it lost?
You completely failed to comprehend my post. On any level.
First off, as I was saying, this stuff is largely moot. Doesn't matter where the jobs went. You're blaming the wrong thing. This is just capitalism in action. Capitalism incentivizes this sort of expense-minimizing, profit-seeking behavior. Government action can keep capitalism in check, but as we see in Washington today, that can only happen for so long (i.e. until big business gets its hands into government through funding and lobbying).
Want a long-term solution? Better start pushing for a new economic system. As long as we stick with capitalism, capitalism itself will keep pushing these kinds of behaviors.
Secondly, I was talking about automation in the future, after wages in developing countries rise to parity with the US and EU and the cost-benefit ratio starts to work out in automation's favor. Not about automation today or in the past (though automation in the past has certainly removed a considerable number of jobs from the equation).
Nobody is saying _no_ jobs were lost due to offshoring - we're saying that even if magically those jobs could come back to America, instead of 500 jobs, there'd only be 100 due to automation. And in 20 more years, there'd only be 10 and they'd require degrees because you need to make sure the robots don't kill us all.
Obligatory don't be evil comment
Maybe on a macro level, but what is the affect on the American middle class worker? Dollars in an economy isn't the only measure of health. Has it created more jobs than it lost?
In fairness, the average person I see complaining about it doesn't seem to have any idea what the TPP entails or why they dislike it other than the rest of the internet told them its bad.
Obligatory don't be evil comment
Ok fair enough, but what happens when they aren't jobs that just so happen to be threatened by automation in the future. Which is really a convenient way to handwave away the problem, because there is no exclusive reason why it has to be those jobs. What happens when they are engineering jobs or the like? There's nothing stopping the same thing happening through a pure free market. Tariffs and taxes are pretty much the only thing that can keep that in check, short of a different economy.
The problem runs deep in some local economies. People who lost manufacturing jobs dented entire regions, not just those who lost their jobs. It gave less spending power to almost everyone.
Any TLDR on the TPP?
I looked at the wiki and I cannot go through all the criticisms.
Pretty much.I totally agree with that. But, the solution (ie. trade wars and tariffs) are worse than the problem.
The solution in the long run is a UBI or some other form of basic income. Basically, free trade (with protections for foreign workers) + a healthy welfare state + a federal jobs program that might be 'make work' for those who want to work is the ideal future. After all, there's always potholes that need to be filled.
I totally agree with that. But, the solution (ie. trade wars and tariffs) are worse than the problem.
The solution in the long run is a UBI or some other form of basic income. Basically, free trade (with protections for foreign workers) + a healthy welfare state + a federal jobs program that might be 'make work' for those who want to work is the ideal future. After all, there's always potholes that need to be filled.
Basically. The internets reaction to this is hilariously shrill.In fairness, the average person I see complaining about it doesn't seem to have any idea what the TPP entails or why they dislike it other than the rest of the internet told them its bad.
I don't have strong feelings about the job/economics angle aspect of TPP, but the intellectual property implications represent a drastic exapansion of the already-bullshit DCMA provisions and generally shitty copyright laws of the US that shouldn't be expanded to the rest of the world.
I'm not again UBI but I don't know if/when that is going to be feasible politically. You are giving me a hypothetical kind of pie-in-the-sky solution. Not every country is jumping into these free trade agreements. The EU and China have strong economies that are creating jobs for their middle class and aren't nearly as invested in these someways lopsided agreements as the US is. Yet here's the US, losing middle class jobs for 30 years and people want to say it's inevitable. Other than the US the "haves" countries don't seem too enthused about free trade with third world nations, so I don't see why they are wrong and the US's way is "inevitable".
I put a very basic explanation further back in the thread.
Basically. The internets reaction to this is hilariously shrill.
I'm not again UBI but I don't know if/when that is going to be feasible politically. You are giving me a hypothetical kind of pie-in-the-sky solution. Not every country is jumping into these free trade agreements. The EU and China have strong economies that are creating jobs for their middle class and aren't nearly as invested in these someways lopsided agreements as the US is. Yet here's the US, losing middle class jobs for 30 years and people want to say it's inevitable. Other than the US many of the "haves" countries don't seem too enthused about free trade with third world nations, so I don't see why they are wrong and the US's way is "inevitable". Don't get me wrong, I see how this helps American business and the corporation, I just don't necessarily see how it helps the middle class worker and average Joe. I guess it depends on your perspective of what you want for the economy.
The IP stuff is definitely the weak point of the deal, more so than any of the stuff internet conspiracies freak out about, but if you're an American voter, what incentive is there really to care? You already live under that regime, if some other countries want to vote it in as well because they've decided the stuff America is willing to give them in return, then oh well I guess.
i.e. broader definition of copyright infringementTemporary Copies: Article 4.1 provides that rights holders may “authorize or prohibit all reproductions of their works, performances, and phonograms, in any manner or form, permanent or temporary (including temporary storage in electronic form).”
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (codified in Title 17 of the United States Code) does not provide rights over temporary copies. The statute's definition of “copies” as “material objects” that are fixed (i.e., “sufficiently permanent…for a period of more than transitory duration”[14]) indicates that temporary storage of copyrighted material would not infringe.
i.e. restrictions on consumers preventing them from selling their used goods internationallyParallel Imports: Article 4.2 provides that rights holders may authorize or prohibit parallel imports.
i.e. more bullshit DRM enforcement. This is by far the worst part of it imoArt. 4.9(a)(ii)(C) provides that prohibited devices and services include those that “enabl[e] or facilitat[e]” circumvention, whereas the DMCA[25] and ACTA only prohibit devices and services that have “the purpose of circumventing.”[26]
What does this mean for our privacy?
Under the law, they are persons, not individuals.But corporations are individuals.
I don't have strong feelings about the job/economics angle aspect of TPP, but the intellectual property implications represent a drastic exapansion of the already-bullshit DCMA provisions and generally shitty copyright laws of the US that shouldn't be expanded to the rest of the world.
This is a huge problem and no country should accept US based companies, enforce copyright laws from the US or any kind of US laws for that matter.
Trade deals usually involve agreements on property rights. As intellectual property grows in value and importance, we have to include them in trade agreements. US companies are, rightly concerned, with China's current stance toward protecting intellectual property. Something has to give.
China is not a part of the TPP.
Although I'm sure Trump would love to retweet you, facts be damned.
That's good, since there are no EU countries involved with the TPP treaty
Edit: I guess free trade to the left is like climate change to the right. They don't know what they are talking about, but they are MAD about it.
Sort of. Google still holds onto it, where Alphabet, of which Google is now a subsidiary, does not.
Pretty much.
Although I would class this as the solution in the immediate run. Over the long haul, we would want to move to a system that doesn't have all the ridiculous externalities that capitalism has (mostly everything to do with over-consumption, pollution, environmental degradation, and all that other wonderful stuff that is a direct result of capitalism).