The great Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes said: “Think things, not words.”
Nowhere is that more important than when discussing international trade, where there are
so many misleading and emotional words used to describe and confuse things that are not
difficult to understand in themselves. The terminology used to describe an export surplus
as a “favorable” balance of trade goes back for centuries.
As early as 1776, Adam Smith’s classic The Wealth of Nations argued that the real wealth
of a nation consists of its goods and services, not its supply of gold.
If the goods and services available to the American people are greater as a result of
international trade, then Americans are wealthier, not poorer, regardless of whether there
is a “deficit” or a “surplus” in the international balance of trade.
If Americans buy more Chinese goods than the Chinese buy American goods, then
China gets American dollars to cover the difference. Since China is not just going to
collect these dollars as souvenirs, it usually turns around and invests them in the
American economy. In most cases, the money never leaves the United States. The
Chinese simply buy investment goods—Rockefeller Center, for example—rather
than consumer goods. American dollars are worthless to the Chinese if they do not
spend them on something. In growth terms, international trade has to balance, in
order to make any economic sense. But it so happens that the conventions of
international accounting count imports and exports in the “balance of trade,” but
not things which don’t move at all, like Rockefeller Center.
What do the makers of Hondas and Toyotas do with all that American money? One of
the things they do is build factories in the United States, employing thousands of
American workers to manufacture their cars closer to their customers, so that Honda and
Toyota do not have to pay the cost of shipping cars across the Pacific Ocean. Their
American employees have been paid sufficiently high wages that they have repeatedly
voted against joining labor unions in secret ballot elections.
What alarms people are the words and the accounting rules that produce numbers to fit
those words. A country’s total output consists of both goods and services—houses and
haircuts, sausage and surgery—but the international trade balance consists only of
physical goods that move. The American economy produces more services than goods,
so it is not surprising that we import more goods than we export—and export more
services than we import.
American know-how and American technology are used by other countries around the
world and these countries of course pay us for these services. For example, most of the
computers in the world run on operating systems created by Microsoft. But their
payments to Microsoft and other American companies for their services are not counted
in the international balance of trade, since trade includes only goods. Yet the American
“balance of trade” is reported in the media as if this partial picture were the whole picture
and the emotionally explosive world “deficit” sets off alarm.
When you count all the money and resources moving in and out of a country for all sorts
of reasons, then you are talking about the international “balance of
payments”—regardless of whether payments were made for goods or services.
According to the accounting rules, when people in other countries invest in the United
States, that makes us a “debtor” to those people, because we owe them the money that
they put here.
Foreigners invested $12 billion in American businesses in 1980 and this rose over the
years until they were investing more than $200 billion annually by 1998. Looked at in
terms of things, there is nothing wrong with this. It creates more jobs for American
workers and creates more goods for American consumers. Looked at in terms of words,
however, this is a growing debt to foreigners. Contrary to popular fears that Japan was
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buying up America, the largest share of foreign direct investment in the United States in
1998 was Great Britain’s 19 percent, compared to Japan’s 16 percent. Britain was also
the largest recipient of American direct investment abroad, receiving 18 percent of such
investments, with Canada being next at 11 percent.
Genuine plunder of one nation or people by another has been all too common throughout human history. During the era before the First World War, when Germany had colonies in Africa, only 4 of its 22 enterprises with cocoa plantations there paid dividends, as did only 8 of 58 rubber plantations and only 3 out of 49 diamond mining companies. At the height of the British Empire in the early twentieth century, the British invested more in the United States than in all of Asia and Africa put together. Quite simply, there was more wealth to be made from rich countries than from poor countries. For similar reasons, throughout most of the twentieth century the United States invested more in Canada than in Asia and Africa put together. Only the rise of prosperous Asian industrial nations in the latter part of the twentieth century attracted more American investors in that part of the world. Perhaps the strongest evidence against the economic significance of colonies in the modern world is tha
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