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NAFTA, open borders and the cycle
March 27, 2008 01:00 PM EST

The North American Free Trade Agreement has been a boondoggle for the American worker. Look at the Bush record: $4 trillion in trade deficits, $2.5 trillion in manufactures alone. One in every six manufacturing jobs, 3 million, gone. America borrows $2 billion a day to pay for foreign goods. The results have seen a collapse of the dollar, oil soaring to $110 a barrel and gas heading toward $4 a gallon. Each of these have added to the troubling aspect of the devalued dollar.

NAFTA has produce jobs, however the jobs that are produced are not quality jobs. Gone are the days of an American industrial sector. Jobs that produce good wages, health care and a 401K or pension have been shipped out of the nation. We as a nation out source jobs because of labor cost. Labor cost are always cheaper in Mexico, Asia and, of course, China. How many times have seen “made in China” on an item. We as a nation have moved into speciality employment such as the medical fields or telecommunications. Service work such as hospitality, restaurant work, delivery or transportation has expanded. We as a nation have given away our best manual labor jobs and replace those high pay, high benefits jobs with low paid and no benefits jobs. When an American company start a business and is successful in employing American workers, wages go up. However, after wages reach a livable wages, these jobs are shipped out of the country. The worker looks for work, and another company starts and the same thing happens. This cycle has stopped the working citizens from realizing good wages and benefits, something that a generation ago was automatic. NAFTA has not created wealth in America, it has created an expanded welfare state.

Another troubling aspect of NAFTA has been the open United States borders that provide the American workers with a competitor from south of the border. The American workers rival has been successful in driving wages down and whatever benefit we had away. Under the guise that these people, from south of the border, just want to better themselves, the United States Government, and that includes both parties, has allowed an unjust labor war between American workers and foreign nationals. This unfair competition pits America’s least educated against a worker that should not even be in the country. Thus driving manual labor wages to the floor. An American worker can not raise a family, pay for a home and feed his family at today’s wages.

American jobs can no longer be outsourced without effecting American wages negatively. If the American worker is in competition with workers in developing nations, we can expect wages to decrease or more jobs to exit the United States. American wages are effectively outsourced just like the wages that go to Mexico. The money sent home by illegals working abroad — known as remittances — is the country’s second-greatest source of foreign income, after oil exports. According to figures released by Mexico’s central bank remittances grew to $23.9 billion. This $23.9 billion in wages would have a dramatic positive effect on the lives of American citizens and American owned businesses. This money spent in an American economy would have kept jobs and wages growing.

With the job market getting more difficult by the day, it is this writer opinion that our country implement President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s 1954 solution. Eisenhower’s solution put American citizens to work by removing illegal cheap labor in harsh economic times. “Operation Wetback” * was the answer in 1954. The U.S. government deported more than 130,000 Mexican nationals in the space of almost a year, although local INS officials claimed that an additional 1 million to 1.2 million had fled to Mexico. At this time, with this economy and a devalued dollar, this would make a great difference in American citizens lives.

*www.csmonitor.com/2006/0706/p09s01-coop.html




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