How Nations Grow Rich: The Case for Free Trade

Author:   Melvyn Krauss (Emeritus Professor of Economics at New York University; Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780195112375


Pages:   156
Publication Date:   04 December 1997
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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How Nations Grow Rich: The Case for Free Trade


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Overview

There can be no doubt, writes economist Melvyn Krauss, that the prosperity of the industrial nations since the Second World War has been due largely to global specialization and interdependence. No one country does all tasks today -- products are designed in one country, produced in another and assembled in a third. The increased standard of living resulting from global specialization in turn has led to the growth of the modern welfare state, including an increased demand for economic security and social measures which guarantee politically-determined minimum consumption standards for citizens. Ironically, says Krauss, as the debate over the North American Free Trade Area (NAFTA), the General Agreement of Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and the recently established World Trade Organization demonstrate, today's welfare state has evolved into a protectionist state. U.S. consumer advocates (Ralph Nader) see free trade as a threat to consumerist legislation. U.S. environmentalists (Jerry Brown) see free trade as a threat to environmental legislation. U.S. human rights advocates (Anna Quindlin) see free trade as a threat to human rights abroad. In How Nations Grow Rich, Krauss argues there is no inherent reason why the growth of the welfare state in the Western industrial countries should conflict with free trade that is, there is no inherent reason for the welfare state to be protectionist. Exposing fallacious welfare state arguments for protection, Krauss makes a powerful case for free trade in general, and NAFTA in particular, as mechanisms for raising U.S. living standards. Americans are made better off through a reallocation of U.S. productive resources from lower-to-higher productivity uses--from textiles to computers, for example. Moreover, by raising wages in Mexico relative to the U.S., Krauss expects NAFTA to help reduce both legal and illegal immigration. Were states like California to reduce their generous social services and affirmative action programs, labor immigration from Mexico would fall to politically acceptable levels. Krauss' novel insight that migration and foreign trade are alternative means of effectuating international exchange is used in this lively and informative book to shed light on a host of important policy issues. By the very act of restricting textile and apparel imports, the U.S. virtually compels foreign textile workers to migrate to the U.S. The European Union's tariff against East European exports provokes a flood of Eastern workers to Western Europe. In How Nations Grow Rich, Krauss dispatches both traditional and newer arguments for protection with unusual verve and clarity. Addressing the belief that protectionism boosts employment, he points out that import restrictions can destroy U.S. jobs when imposed on materials we use as parts. For example, in 1991, Apple and Toshiba suffered a dramatic increase in their production costs as a result of a 63% tariff on imported Japanese flat-panel display screens. This protect-America policy backfired, causing these two mega-companies to move their production facilities abroad. In response to protectionist demands that the U.S. close its markets until Japan reduces its trade barriers against U.S. goods--that trade be fair before it can be free--Krauss points out that in a market economy where consumers are kings, only a consumer-based equity standard is valid. Thus what the fair trade protectionist argument really comes down to is the nonsensical proposition that because foreign countries damage their consumers by foolish protectionist measures, equity demands the United States follow suit. This wide-ranging and stimulating book clarifies such important and often inaccessible issues as development policy, foreign aid, trade sanctions, child labor, human rights trade linkages, immigration, European Monetary Union and affirmative action trade policies. How Nations Grow Rich is must reading for anyone concerned with public policy and international economics.

Full Product Details

Author:   Melvyn Krauss (Emeritus Professor of Economics at New York University; Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 16.20cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 24.40cm
Weight:   0.427kg
ISBN:  

9780195112375


ISBN 10:   0195112377
Pages:   156
Publication Date:   04 December 1997
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Reviews

No reader of How Nations Grow Rich will complain about a shortage of quotations from articles in the New York Times, The Wall Street Journal and the Financial Times. ... the book is mercifully free of the arcane econometric formulas that affect similar texts. Wall Street Journal (Europe), 2 July 1997


This is a forceful argument in favour of free trade economics at its most extreme. Krauss, one of America's most respected academic economists, can see no sane counter-argument to free trade, nor can he see any problem with following its dictates single-mindedly, wherever they may lead. And where they lead in this case is to the abolition of any social programme, the abandonment of any environmental protection, the breaking down of any legal protection for workers. These are, quite literally, irrelevant, he says. Abandon all such protections, Krauss argues, and although there might be massive job losses in one place, there will be compensatory job gains elsewhere. On the macroeconomic scale, everything would reach a sustainable level and all would be right. Any form of protection, just gets in the way of the economy working properly. The figures may indeed add up, but the wilful ignorance of the consequences of these actions is shocking to say the least. (Kirkus UK)


Author Information

Melvyn Krauss is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and Emeritus Professor of Economics at New York University.

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