Monday, October 1, 2018
USMCA - Winners: Big Business / Losers: The Little Guys
What
would happen if I offered you a huge cash gift (no strings), one that one has
to be paid back by millions of people (you would only have a tiny fraction of
debt compared to your gift)? Would you be feeling pretty good? Would your net
worth skyrocket? You mean as in “here, corporate America, have a trillion+
dollars in hard cash benefits in the form of a huge tax cut. Massive increase
to the federal deficit? Don’t worry, the cost will be spread across every
taxpayer in the land. Eat up!”?
You
think maybe the stock market just might soar to its highest level as a result?
Duhoh! So what if almost no well-paying jobs were created or that the resulting
tsunami of dividends and stock buybacks pretty much only benefitted those with
massive stock portfolios. If giving taxpayer money away is the cause of the overperforming
stock market, is that really a sign of a great economy? Slowly, I move, towards
the underlying issues in replacing NAFTA.
Sure
the majority of American farms are family-owned, and about half of what we
consume in the United States comes from small family farms. Exports, not so
much. That’s where agribusiness gets seriously corporate. And there are market
segments where big business dominates in every way. The USDA tells us: “64 percent of all vegetable sales and 66
percent of all dairy sales come from the 3 percent of farms that are large or
very large family farms.” So all those benefits in the U.S. – Mexico – Canada agreement
on trade (nicknamed: “USMCA,” aka NAFTA’s replacement) that opened up American
farm products to Canada and Mexico… ah… er… mostly go to those agribusiness
corporations? Oh, yeah.
Our
massive annual trade deficit, according to Donald Trump which he describes as
“lost money,” is on the order of $800 billion a year. I am still struggling to
understand how Americans acquiring $800 billion dollars of imported goods and
services a year is “lost money.” We apparently got a bargain on those goods and
services… they’re ours… so where did we “lose” money? It’s like saying since
you bought and own a house and bought and own a car, you lost the money you
paid for those assets? Huh?
Add
to that reality a proviso in the USMCA that keeps prescription drugs
manufactured in Mexico and Canada out of the U.S. As Trump said in his Rose
Garden speech on October 1st announcing the USMCA, “you don’t know
how those drugs were made.” Yup, that third world country, Canada, probably has
no standards for their pharmas!
Of
course, all of this means one thing: higher prices for consumers. Big U.S.
companies have less competition and can jack up those prices without much fear
of a price war. But think about all those jobs we are going to bring back.
Really?
You
might forget why so much of the U.S. automotive manufacturing business went
(mostly) to Canada in the first place. It was quite a few years ago, well before
the assembly-lines were mostly robots (and well-before the great automotive
bankruptcies and bailouts in the last decade). The Canadian workers were paid
pretty much the same as their American counterparts, but the big difference was
that about $1500/car came from the automakers’ having to paying for their union
workers’ healthcare through private plans, while Canadian workers got that
benefit just by being Canadian residents! The lack of national healthcare in
the U.S. made the movement of jobs north possible! A whole lot of American
automakers, noting that Ontario was close to Michigan anyway, opened big plants
north of the border accordingly. Saved $1500/car!
Meanwhile,
after those Canadian plants had been operational for over a decade, as a result
of the Chrysler/General Motors bankruptcies, there was a major shift away from
U.S. assembly-line workers towards fully-automated robotic manufacturing.
Robots did not need healthcare or fringe benefit packages. A whole lot fewer
people were involved in making cars. Thus, bringing car-manufacturing back to
the United States – bringing just about any manufacturing back to the United
States – wasn’t going to be about creating lots of new jobs.
It
was clearly no more expensive to manufacture in the “automated” United States
than it was to outsource to cheaper labor overseas. Labor wasn’t even an issue.
The huge beneficiaries to onshoring manufacturing? Not workers who had long
been replaced. The mega-wealthy corporations who owned the robots! Income
inequality accelerated as Trump’s corporate cronies, waddling fat from the tax
cut, could waddle further by having their machines generate more wealth that
used to be paid to workers.
But
hyperbole-driven Donald Trump is also touting all those new protections for
American intellectual property the USMCA will bring us. Really? Let’s dig
deeper. Canada, for example, tends to protect its citizens from loss of privacy
and excessive corporate profits. It favors the little guy, including creative
individuals who generate copyrights. The United States, on the other hand,
tends to favor big companies who have little or no responsibility under U.S.
law if their behemoths accidentally become major enablers of content piracy.
Well, the USMCA extends that “safe harbor” concept to American businesses
operating in Canada and Mexico. Screw the content creators; they’re just little
guys!
“Mitch
Glazier, president of the Recording Industry Association of America,
zeroed in on the inclusion of a safe harbor provision in the proposed text of
the new pact, meant to be an updated version of the North American Free Trade
Agreement.
“The
safe harbor shields internet providers and tech companies from liability
for piracy as long as they take infringing content down promptly upon
notification of the copyright holder. Record labels, studios, and other content
groups have long criticized the safe harbor provision of U.S. copyright law as
putting too much of the burden on content owners to police piracy online.
“‘Unfortunately,
the agreement’s proposed text does not advance adequate modern copyright
protections for American creators,’ Glazier said in a statement on Monday
[10-1]. ‘Instead, the proposal enshrines regulatory 20-year-old ‘safe harbor’
provisions that do not comport with today’s digital reality. These provisions
enrich platforms that abuse outdated liability protections at the expense of
American creators and the U.S. music community, which provides real jobs and is
one of our nation’s biggest cultural assets.’” Daily Variety, October 1st.
The Rose Garden speech continued.
Recently,
Mr. Trump’s trade representatives approached their counterparts in the People’s
Republic with an invitation to begin new serious bilateral negotiations towards
a new Sino-America trade agreement. Bully Trump was sure that adding more
tariffs against PRC imports would bring China to its knees. China, enjoying
massive success in its multilateral trade agreement negotiations both in Asia
and reaching to the European Union (clearly excluding the United States),
rebuffed that U.S. invitation and instead instituted some new limitations on
American companies operating in China.
“China has scrapped trade
talks with the United States days before President Trump [was] set to escalate
the commercial battle with a new round of tariffs, according to a person
familiar with the discussion.
“Chinese officials canceled the
planned negotiations after Trump announced he would impose new levies of up to
10 percent on another $200 billion in Chinese imports, effective
Monday [9/24]. Beijing vowed to strike back, slapping duties of up
to 10 percent on an additional $60 billion in American products.”
Washington Post, September 22nd.
But
in Trumpian revisionism, the Donald explained during his Rosen Garden speech
that while the Chinese desperately wanted the United States to return to the
trade agreement bargaining agreement, it was the United States who rebuffed
China’s request. Not exactly. And when the Americans and the Chinese do sit
down to work out a trade agreement, inevitably, the Chinese know that they
aren’t going to give very much. But by the time Trump explains how great that
agreement will be, even if the results are mediocre as most experts expect,
most Americans will take his description at face value. They are hardly likely,
unless they are directly impacted, to examine the details. Are you getting used
to losing yet?
I’m Peter Dekom, and the master of
spin and fake news, Donald John Trump, is at it again… doing what he does best…
even if the American people do not remotely have the flamboyant benefits their
President is describing.
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