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Tag Archives: Gregory Mankiw

The Panama Canal Project Facilitates World Trade.

We might be able to divide the world between economic thinkers and everyone else.

I noted yesterday that economist Gregory Mankiw, as President Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers chair, said that outsourcing was probably a plus in the long run. Hearing his statement, reporters divided into 2 groups.

1. Economic Thinkers: Those from the FT, Wall Street Journal, and a Washington Post reporter who had an economics degree heard what they learned in Economics 101. Trade leads to specialization which means efficiencies that generate higher living standards and incomes. It was a typical economist’s statement about world trade. Nothing out of the ordinary.

2. Everyone Else: The other reporters sensed a big story. They had a viscerally negative response to anyone who said sending jobs elsewhere could be good. For them, the quote was about jobs leaving the country.

You can see the dichotomy. One group thinks more growth while the other sees unemployment. The unemployment group dominated the headlines. Political damage control immediately followed the press conference.

1. Economic Thinkers: It has also been suggested that there is a difference in our response to the word protectionist. Remembering Adam Smith and David Ricardo, people who think economically believe protectionist policies are bad. They cite the Corn Laws in 18th century England that increased the price of domestic corn by taxing imported grains. They think of the Smoot-Hawley tariffs that fueled the severity of the 1930s depression by diminishing international trade.

2. Everyone Else: For many other people, though, protection does not conjure up the negatives. After all, protecting someone can be good.

As a result, the Business Roundtable suggests a new trade lexicon:

Negative Connotation Positive Connotation
Competition Growth
Retool Re-make
Protectionism Isolationism
World trade Working with the world
Long term growth Sustained growth
Global trade Trade
Cheaper Specialized
Forced to Take charge
Cost efficiencies Meeting customers
Making our budget Meeting our needs
Do less with more Do more with more

 

From money (not just currency) to free lunches (there are none), economics is everywhere. Your opinion about how to help everyone think economically?

The idea and most of the information for this post came from Gregory Mankiw’s co-written paper, “The Politics and Economics of Offshore Outsourcing.” It also takes us to a wonderful Teaching Company course, “Thinking Like an Economist,” from Randall Bartlett.

 

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Obama/Biden and Romney/Ryan Issues

Until November 6, at econlife, Mondays will be about presidential election economics.

In 2004, when President Bush’s Council of Economic Advisers chairman, Harvard professor Greg Mankiw, was lambasted for saying, “… I think outsourcing is a growing phenomenon, but it’s something that we should realize is probably a plus for the economy in the long run, ” politicians, left and right, distanced themselves from his position.

Fast forward to 2012. Still, no one wants to be called an outsourcer. And still we are focusing on the politics of outsourcing rather than its economics.

Here are the economics:

A call center in India or an Apple assembly plant in China are examples of  (offshore) outsourcing when firms send jobs abroad that could be done by domestic manufacturing and service workers. (Please note that here, when we refer to outsourcing, we mean offshore outsourcing.)

The Congressional Research Service tells us that the macroeconomic slowdown, not outsourcing, is primarily responsible for high unemployment.

Most economists believe that the US economy benefits from globalization. As a nation, incomes will rise, goods will be cheaper, and corporate profits will increase whenever outsourcing leads to greater efficiency for producing goods and services.

But others accurately point out that outsourcing not only means job losses but can take place on an “uneven” playing field where other nations’ subsidies unfairly attract US businesses.

The bottom line: After discussing what we do know, most research on outsourcing concludes with, “We need to know more.” No one has gathered sufficient empirical data to be sure of the specific impact of offshore outsourcing.

However, economists like Princeton’s Alan Blinder suggest that we have only seen the tip of the iceberg. In the future, with a sufficiently sizable proportion of the economy potentially being outsourced, we will face a massive shift in how we do business.

Maybe that is what our presidential candidates and the media should be discussing.

Also, I hope they will remember what David Ricardo said about international trade. Explaining the concept of comparative advantage, he told us that we elevate everyone’s well-being when nations produce what they are relatively best at.

For example, what if you can teach a class skillfully or mow your lawn expertly while your neighbor can mow the lawn mediocrely or get paid minimum wage at a fast food restaurant? Then you should teach, she should mow and everyone will be better off. The reason? You sacrifice too much by not teaching when you mow and she would sacrifice too much if she earned less at her fast food job.

Varied, there is a wealth of information about outsourcing. Harvard economist Gregory Mankiw co-wrote a paper on the politics and economics of outsourcing and Princeton economist Alan Blinder, looking at “personal” and “impersonal” services and goods discussed how specific jobs might be affected when outsourcing proliferates, and the St. Louis Fed looked at Germany and outsourcing. In addition, here is a recent Congressional Research Service report and a description of the brouhaha about the Mankiw outsourcing statement when he was the CEA chair.

 

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