Walter E. Williams bio photo

Walter E. Williams

Bradley Prize Winner 2017

Professor of Economics.
wwilliam@gmu.edu
(703) 993-1148
D158 Buchanan Hall
Department of Economics
George Mason University

Related Sites:
The homepage of George Mason University.
Homepage of the Department of Economics at GMU.

There’s the “Free Trade but Fair Trade” crowd, and the “Level Playing Field” crowd, and the “America First” crowd, all calling for tariffs and other international trade restrictions. Their supposed adversary is corporate America, seeking to boost profits by either importing goods made by cheaper foreign labor or relocating plants in foreign lands to directly take advantage of cheaper labor. They claim that this accounts for the loss of U.S. manufacturing jobs and other economic woes. Their argument has considerable emotional appeal, but they’ve misidentified the true villain in the piece. Let’s look at it.

Suppose U-Needa Shirt Co. relocated its production facilities to India in order to take advantage of cheaper labor. This is America, the land of the free. There is absolutely nothing that prevents a group of Americans as investors and workers from setting up Made in America Shirt Co. to sell shirts to the American people. This same opportunity exists for just about anything once manufactured in America but now made overseas.

At this juncture, let’s take a thinking pause and ask: Is what Williams said in the previous paragraph true or false?

Let’s proceed. You might ask, “How in the world can Made in America Shirt Co. compete with U-Needa Shirt Co., who has much lower labor costs?” That’s a different question, but it has nothing to do with the rights of American investors and workers to set up American-based manufacturing facilities. But let’s answer the question anyway. American consumers are free to purchase from whomever they choose. Made in American Shirt Co. would survive and prosper if American consumers chose to purchase shirts from it, rather than U-Needa Shirt Company.

Let’s take another thinking break and ask: Is what Williams said in the previous paragraph true or false?

Here’s where the crunch comes. It’s probable that U-Needa Shirt Co., because of its lower costs, will be able to undercut prices charged by Made in America Shirt Co. Thus, we encounter that troubling consumer characteristic of preferring lower prices to higher prices.

So what to do? Made in America Shirt Co. might try to change American consumer preferences so that they’re indifferent between high and low prices. I predict that’s a strategy doomed to failure, except maybe for a few diehard customers. There’re no two ways about it. The true enemy of Made in America Shirt Co. and its workers is not U-Needa Shirt Co. but the American consumer and his preference for lower prices coupled with his freedom to purchase from whomever he pleases.

What to do? One strategy for Made in America Shirt Co. and its workers is to get Washington to enact measures restricting consumer choices. But you have to be slick about it. You just can’t ask President Bush and Congress to criminalize purchases from U-Needa Shirt Co. You must make a pretense of selflessness and speak of national defense concerns like, “What if there were war and we had no shirts for our soldiers?” You must talk of being for free trade but fair trade and level playing fields.

There’s another strategy. Suppose Made in America Shirt Co. could cover all of its cost with a $20 shirt price, while U-Needa Shirt could do so by charging $15? Made in America Shirt might ask Congress to enact an Aid to Dependent American Shirt Manufacturers law, whereby it would receive a $5 per shirt handout – then it could meet U-Needa Shirt Co.’s price.

That might not be politically viable because the handout is too visible. Congress might propose, “Rather than giving you a $5 per shirt handout, how about if we impose a $5 per shirt import tax on U-Needa Shirt Co.’s shirts? Then they’ll have to charge $20. That way, you get what you want – a level playing field – we get more tax dollars, and nobody’s the wiser.”