1,000,000 economists can be wrong: the free trade fallacies
on September 30th, 2011 at 8:16 amNot only did the global financial crisis catch the vast majority of economists completely unawares, they instead expected tranquil and even buoyant times just as the biggest economic crisis since the Great Depression began. My favourite such observation is from the OECD‘s Economic Outlook for June 2007—in which the Chief Economist suggested that, “the current economic situation is in many ways better than what we have experienced in years . . . Our central forecast remains indeed quite benign.” But there are countless other such utterly wrong prognostications about the economy, from the profession that is supposed to be the font of wisdom on the economy.
Those “in the know” understand that this is not an isolated failing. The Neoclassical model that dominates economics today is riven with logical and empirical fallacies. If economics were a real science, it would have long ago been overthrown and replaced by something more realistic.
Yet at least 90% of academic economists believe in this model, as do almost all economists working in government and private industry. Left to their own devices, they will continue thinking that this model does describe the economy as the real economy falls deeper and deeper into a crisis, even though their model says that this can’t even happen.
Since economics has failed to clean out its own intellectual stable, it will be the public that finally forces reform upon it – as once-supporters like Anatole Kaletsky of The Times calls for “a revolution in economic thought” and George Soros funds an Institute for New Economic Thinking. With luck, in a decade or two, a more realistic approach to economics might emerge. But in the meantime, here’s a simple guide for the public: Anything the vast majority of economists believe is likely to be wrong.
Which brings me to “Free Trade.” The belief in Free Trade is one of the hallmarks not just of the Neoclassical school which began in the 1870s, but also of the original Classical school which began with Smith in 1776. It argues that almost everyone’s material welfare will be increased if all countries specialise in what they are good at—a proposition that on the surface seems plausible, and a formidable body of mathematical economic theory has been erected to support it.
Unfortunately, like so much else in economics the model of Free Trade is, to quote the humorist H.L. Mencken, “neat, plausible, and wrong.” The theoretical fallacies at its core have been there since David Ricardo first coined his model of comparative advantage during the political battle to repeal the “Corn Laws,” which restricted the importing of cereal crops into England.
The arguments in favour of the Corn Laws included the belief that if trade were unregulated, English industry—in particular its agriculture—might be wiped out by foreign competition. Ricardo, in a brilliant debating ploy, conceded his opponents’ case that a rival country (Portugal, which was then one of Britain’s major rivals) was better at both agriculture and manufacturing than England and then preceded to “prove” that England would still benefit from Free Trade.
He assumed that in Portugal 80 men could produce a quantity of wine (say, 1000 gallons), whereas England would need 120 men to produce the same amount and that Portugal was more efficient too at producing cloth—needing 90 men to produce a quantity of cloth (say, 100 square yards of cotton) whereas England needed 100.
Without trade, both countries would have to produce both goods for themselves so that per 1,000 workers, Portugal would produce some combination lying between the extremes of 12,500 gallons of wine and 1,100 yards of cotton, while England would produce a combination lying between 8,333 gallons of wine and 1,000 yards of cloth.
If however Portugal specialised only in wine and England specialised only in cloth, the total output would be 12,500 gallons of wine and 1,000 yards of cloth. This is more than the total output of the two countries in the absence of trade. With Free Trade, they could specialise in their comparative advantages and welfare in both countries would be higher.
This argument was so clever that it aided the campaign to repeal the Corn Laws and it has seduced almost all economists ever since.
But there is an obvious fallacy to this neat and plausible argument: To effect specialisation, England has to shift labour and capital from wine to cloth (and Portugal has to do the opposite). Arguably labour can be retrained—a vigneron can become a machinist—but how do you convert wine press into a spinning jenny?
The obvious answer is that you don’t. Instead, you sell the wine press and buy a spinning jenny with the proceeds. But because of the introduction of trade, the price of wine in England would have fallen, so that the sale price of the wine press will also fall (economists have modified Ricardo’s model to introduce curves where Ricardo had straight lines, so that total specialisation is no longer required and there would still be some wine production in England under the “new” model of Free Trade), while the price of spinning jennies will have risen, given the new export market to Portugal. Some capital is necessarily destroyed by the opening up of trade and it applies in reverse in Portugal as well.
Since capital is destroyed when trade is liberalised, the watertight argument that trade necessarily improves material welfare springs a leak. If economics were a real science, this real-world complication to Ricardo’s argument would be considered, but it has never been seriously addressed.
These and many other failings that explain why, when Dani Rodrik took a careful look at the empirical record of trade liberalisation, he found that it had frequently reduced material welfare rather than increasing it. Writing back in 2001, he summarised his findings for Foreign Policy magazine with the statement that:
“Advocates of global economic integration hold out utopian visions of the prosperity that developing countries will reap if they open their borders to commerce and capital. This hollow promise diverts poor nations’ attention and resources from the key domestic innovations needed to spur economic growth.”
As an economist who has specialised in dissecting the empirical claims for the role of free trade, Rodrik has the might of the majority of the profession against him. As noted above, that’s a good rule of thumb that Rodrik is right.



so, if 90% of all economists are living in ga-ga land (see also this article by the always entertaining John Michael Greer)
can we infer then, as a general rule of thumb, that 90% of all that any randomly chosen economists say is also hogwash?
when the Australian dollar falls %40 – thus making, on the world market, in the age of globalisation, the average house in Australia worth half what it was – does this mean Steve was right about prediction of falling house prices but didn’t see it?
conversely, when the $AUD went up since 2009 and all the QEs, thus making our house prices rise on the relative world market does, this make him wrong?
that would suggest a 50% track record
if the dollar falls to 50% of what it is today and, at the same time, things turn to poo in China, will those liquidating in China and looking to invest somewhere safer see the relative fall in Aussie house prices as an invitation to buy?
who knows eh?
i bet 90% of economists don’t
pop
Would be nice to see a link to a nice list of the fallacies of free trade. Do I recall correctly from DE that one of them is Ricardo’s great argument only applies to two commodities? The book Bad Samaritans discusses, among other things, how the free trade theology doesn’t account for developmental effects generally, or network effects, or learning curves. Adam Smith’s Wealth of Nations is mostly about the positive value of network effects. It’s desireable to have the highest technology industry possible in one’s own country because of network effects, raising the level of technlogy generally and producing spin-offs. That kind of subsidy is useful, but in USA we’ve given most of it away, except somewhat in arms and more at the level of agriculture where it’s mostly counterproductive (but profitable to those involved). Anyway, the great rise of market liberal “Free Trade” (mainly free capital flows) has mainly been designed to undercut wage standards, environmental standards, and other quality standards. It hasn’t increased social welfare (where applied, e.g. not in east Asia) instead, it’s increased inequality and social dysfunction.
@ Steve
“Anything the vast majority of economists believe is likely to be wrong.”
Yes, of course. Economist are part of the problem.
The major problem is the consensual belief that governments have people with the intellectual and cognitive abilities plus the competence to find solutions to the now upon us, Global socio-economic Crisis.
They don’t! They are all now merely to save themselves.
The fact is that our bureaucrats and political “leadership” simple do the bidding of the high levels of the Banking system and for that you just need dumb and obedient servants, such as we indeed have.
Once we realize that these peoples are frauds and merely play out the role of jailers while scamming the productivity of human beings, the game will be over.
Not so easy, as we are of them and they are of us; we are the same and we all want to suck at the teat of other peoples production.
Meanwhile M’s Gillard desperately and fanatically, with her stooge black duck, seek to impose more and more taxation upon Australians and SME’s.
Why?
Our Australian natural resources for the World’s wealthy on behalf of those of higher order; the investors cum Banker System. Australian resources are too valuable to be left in the hands of its citizens. This is Fascism. The Fabian dream of the Divinity in Governance by the heavy hand of Taxation theft is second only to Gillard’s et al first loyalty to the Royal Queen whose blood line began with murderers, thieves and liars.
M’s Gillard obviously does not represent the best interests of Australia or its citizens, au contraire.
I don’t believe that she has beaten Whitlam for the Australia’s worst Prime Minister Prize, but she certainly is close but while also being the most treacherous and untrustworthy Prime Minister.
Another problem of the free trade argument is that it assumes a free market without government interference, not accounting for the following:
- Middle and working class labor is put in direct competition with low-wage workers overseas (China, India) but there is no free flow of professional and managerial class labor into the country.
- Drugs are criminalized.
- Strengthening of intellectual property: how on earth does government monopoly become part of free trade? I think Orwell would appreciate this one.
- Corporations are given ever more privilege to sue governments for any perceived slight.
This is what Dean Baker calls “nanny state conservatism”: so-called free traders and economic liberals advocating free markets/trade as long as markets are rigged by the government to ensure that income and wealth flows up to the rich.
Nevertheless, I can see the argument that even if the above interventions did not exist, free trade still wouldn’t maximize economic welfare.
A paper by the RBA notes that “the argument that current account deficits represent the optimal outcomes of decisions made by ‘consenting adults’ gained wide support.”
So even if the current account has blow out of all proportion, it doesn’t matter because their models tell them it is an efficient outcome! Much like mortgage debt is $1 trillion and housing prices are sky-high but that doesn’t matter because it represents an equilibrium outcome…
Paper: “Current Account Deficits: The Australian Debate”
@ Philip September 30, 2011 at 2:44 pm | #
“Drugs are criminalized.”
It appears to me from experience that one of the prime functions of all levels of government in Australia is to criminalize almost everything particularly its citizens; I speak of the hoards of police hiding under bushes, in discreet locations, using long range meters on downhill slopes; teams of radar wielding police at trick locations (20Km signage at airports); Councils on the bonus parking meters; booze buses at 0930 in the mornings on main highways, and
the need to get Police Clearance for job applications, opening a business, buying a house; anything and it is getting more pervasive. Forget to renew your dog license and you instantly become an arch criminal up there with the brotherhood of terrorists.
I also remember not so long ago as government shut down a major part of the beef industry overnight and without warning bringing huge losses at personal levels to the whole chain of the beef export to Indonesia. For what?: it appears that some “green” group orchestrated some false but paid for photo-shoots to sell their ideology and this spurred government to more knee-jerk over-reaction when it was released to the compliant and stupid MSM.
Did those Insurance Companies pay out of the Brisbane flood claims? Not many and Gillard backed down: Fascism, first and foremost.
The Carbon Credit scam: Gillard proposes to buy ratted out Power Plants whose owners have been taking tax advantages for decades to replace and upgrade their generating systems, but have not – because “they” (who turn over annually over US$85B per annum) refuse to modernize. It is either that or she will loan them taxpayer funds to pay the Carbon Tax:
It is insane and not free-market. It is Fascism pure and simple.
You are correct: there is no free market in Australia – only government driven monopoly and blanket taxation beyond the grave.
Fabian divinity!
But then, government always deters free enterprise in order to squeeze the blood from the stones; it is what government do best!
I remember Reg Ansett – I believe that “they” bankrupted him 6 times because they didn’t like him getting too uppity and far too stubborn and independent.
Buy a cheap air ticket today? Taxes almost equal the airfare.
And I just love the words that Economists use to describe their wet-dreams: e.g. “equilibrium” “optimal” “efficiency” “stability” “balance” “correlation”
roll the eyes and swing the incense pots – Oh lordy!
This was just a re-post of a brief piece written for Online Opinion Charles. One of these days I’ll have to tackle the theory of comparative advantage in the same detail that I did micro in the first edition of DE, or macro in the second edition. But as yet, I haven’t had the time.
peterjbolton,
Yes, in what is falsely called the neo-liberal period, the state has not become less interventionist or violent. Government policy is simply shifted to support the rentier oligarchy (speculators, property owners, bankers, IP, etc.) rather than the public. (Falsely because the policies are not new and often has little to do with economic liberalism).
Our tax system is so distorted in favor of speculation that even the mass media has picked up on it.
http://www.smh.com.au/business/time-to-change-the-unfair-rules-for-negative-gearing-20110424-1dsu6.html
http://www.smh.com.au/opinion/politics/land-is-the-best-hope-for-fixing-tax-system-20110929-1kz76.html
The Ken Henry review advocates scrapping 125 inefficient taxes on business, labour and consumers, and replacing it with 4: land value and rent resource taxes, and a much lower income tax on labour and business.
Economists know perfectly well that land value and rent resource taxes are not distortionary. The land market is Australia’s largest market, and taxing it will not result in land moving to the Cayman Islands.
I fail to see why labour and business should bare the brunt of taxation, essentially enslaving the public to the parasitic rentier oligarchy.
@ Philip September 30, 2011 at 4:02 pm | #
“The Ken Henry review advocates scrapping 125 inefficient taxes on business, labour and consumers, and replacing it with 4: land value and rent resource taxes, and a much lower income tax on labour and business.”
I find it blatantly appalling that the Ken Henry tax review was a reform where Gillard and that clown Swan just lift an idea out of the review and slam dunk it onto the Taxation suites we already have and call it “reform”. In fact it is downright criminal and just plain stupid; but then, what else should we expect?
“I fail to see why labour and business should bare the brunt of taxation, essentially enslaving the public to the parasitic rentier oligarchy.”
This is speculation but I see the Banking system knowing that a huge crunch is coming and they are preparing by soliciting government to enact new levels of Taxation so as to cover their asset prices – land and houses; the banks do not want house prices to fall; I was amused last week when I saw Commonwealth Bank offering new iPhone and iPad application for seeking real estate “investments” to young buyers.
I also saw the Bank Association offering to make economic studies of the future for government as a Partner – but which government will pay for. Now would you expect that any reports by the Banks would be designed to protect and enhance their own interests?
Of course they would.
And this is consistent with the governments policies of killing off small business because it is easier to control the taxation flows as their is no choices; this Fabian wet dream is called “totalitarianism”.
Sell the resources control the labour force and let the Banks have their way, in the housing game but after you tax labour from 35% up to 76%.
Big business is delighted to get our resources for nothing!
I like David Landis’ discussions of free trade and comparative advantage in his book “The Wealth and Poverty of Nations”. He quotes a Spanish official speaking this way in the 17th century, essentially saying to let all the other countries actually produce stuff, all the better for us to buy them. Writing back in 1998, Landis goes on to comment that:
“Such foolishness is still heard today, in the guise of comparative advantage and neoclassical trade theory. I have heard serious scholars say that the United States need not worry about its huge trade deficit with Japan. After, the Japanese are giving us useful things in exchange for paper printed with the portrait of George Washington. This sounds good but, but it’s bad. Wealth is not so good as work, nor riches so good as earnings” (p. 172).
‘Wealth is not so good as work, nor riches so good as earnings’. I like that. America now gets imported goods cheaper than it could produce at home – but the cost has been the well-paying, secure and salaried jobs of its once strong manufacturing sector, leaving many of those people to work casual jobs at low wages – or not at all. Meanwhile it has contributed to their economy becoming increasingly dependent on debt and a finance sector with less ventures to finance and increasingly reliant on asset price speculation for its profits. Australia has headed down the same road…
That’s only because the US hasn’t used its power over its currency correctly.
The correct approach is to ensure there is sufficient money in the system so that foreigners can hoard it and the domestic system operates at full production.
That way foreigners trying to build their country using exports quickly become your country’s vassals.
There is nothing wrong with taking advantage of the kindness of foreigners, but not at the expense of your domestic population.
Almost certainly the ‘taking advantage of foreigners’ will generate a fallacy of composition that will result in some stable state.
“But because of the introduction of trade, the price of wine in England would have fallen, so that the sale price of the wine press will also fall ”
I’m not defending the free trade argument, which is clearly nonsense because trade is never free in the real world, but why not sell the wine press to Portugal where the price will have gone up?
@ NeilW September 30, 2011 at 6:27 pm
Of course the foreigners who build most of our cars, electronics, home appliances etc and who win the mathematics and science olympiads are too stupid to recognize Monopoly play-money and are happy to remain vassals, working in sweat-shops to provide cheap consumption goods for export.
The only fallacy of composition you need to understand is the composition of government in macroeconomic theories.
@Charles Peterson
This has a brief comment on the problems of the comparative advantage theory when capital is mobile:
http://ebookbrowse.com/envecon2000-pdf-d13553795
(Section D page
*^ ”
” should be “8 )”
Your “refutation” of Ricardo is laughable.
Since England was more industrial, they would have a comparative advantage in the manufacture of wine presses. The productivity gains in both countries would enhance the purchasing power of everyone. The glut of wine presses in England would be exported.
The Keynesian theory of everything presumes a rising price level, ie. a diminishing purchasing power as excess credit pursues degraded workers. Ricardo’s argument presumes honest money.
governments and their spending programs are vital for domestic private sector prosperity, and preventing de industrialisation
get used to it ,
Having recently read Richard Heinbergs book, there is a pretty compelling argument that the cost of transportation will rise in the future on the back of dwindling oil supplies. That being the case, it sounds more likely that a return to self sufficiency amongst communities and nations will become more prevalent again, on the basis that it is cheaper than specialising, and importing other products from overseas. It would be helpful if there was some research done to establish the price level for oil which will force countries to diversify and become more self sufficient once again just like we did in the past.
Hello Steve: Just would like to say how much we all enjoyed “Neat plausible…” in
NYC. Did you give the same talk at LSE, or was that a different lecture? If different, perhaps you could do a later post on the content?
On the subject of free trade, one element left out of the discussion is the medium of settlement, which at that time was gold. Before Smith and Ricardo, there was
Gresham, and he had, in my view, an extremely important point to make on the
subject, on which I would welcome your comments. He said that “industry is
destroyed at the source of money creation”. In the 16th and 17th centuries, gold
and silver were money, and Spain, under the Habsburg monarchs, with its’ vast
discoveries of slave produced metals from the new world, was the money “printer”
of its’ day. As this money flowed into the treasury, distortions in national production followed, as those “closest to the source” could command the allocation
of resources as they desired. Wages in those areas rose, competing with wages in
exportable production, and imports became, over time, cheaper against the rising
cost of domestic production.
In a way, this observation is just a much older version of Triffin’s dilemma regarding the owner of the reserve currency, when it is unbacked by an inter-
nationally recognized real asset sufficient to settle its’ trade balances: Production
at home is curtailed as imports become cheaper than domestic goods, until that
sort of “Minsky moment” when the holders of the paper reserve realize that no
possibility exists for the conversion of those reserves into real tangible wealth or
assets within the foreseeable future, based on the capacity and willingness of
the issuer to settle those claims. The siren song of a sovereign issuing debt to
obtain real tangible wealth for free is nigh unto irresistible.
Off topic: ECRI has called a recession in the US:
http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000048636
David Graeber’s new book casts some doubt on that standard explanation Robert–it’s worth reading.
And I haven’t given the launch talk yet–that is on Tuesday next week. I am seeing now whether I can arrange live streaming of it to the blog.
IT WILL SOON BE TIME FOR THE SHAMAN:
“And now it is time to face the facts. What facts? The facts which state that between household, corporate and government debt, the developed world has $20 trillion in debt over and above the sustainable threshold by the definition of “stable” debt to GDP of 180%. The facts according to which all attempts to eliminate the excess debt have failed, and for now even the Fed’s relentless pursuit of inflating our way out this insurmountable debt load have been for nothing. The facts which state that the only way to resolve the massive debt load is through a global coordinated debt restructuring (which would, among other things, push all global banks into bankruptcy) which, when all is said and done, will have to be funded by the world’s financial asset holders: the middle-and upper-class, which, if BCS is right, have a ~30% one-time tax on all their assets to look forward to as the great mean reversion finally arrives and the world is set back on a viable path. But not before the biggest episode of “transitory” pain, misery and suffering in the history of mankind. Good luck, politicians and holders of financial assets, you will need it because after Denial comes Anger, and only long after does Acceptance finally arrive.”
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/muddle-through-has-failed-bcg-says-there-may-be-only-painful-ways-out-crisis
Hey Steve, this is so big, its on the front page of Business Insider. Check it out.
http://www.businessinsider.com/lakshman-achuthan-says-us-going-into-a-new-recession-2011-9
Your weary Denver camera operator
Yes, great stuff to see. Realism will finally sink in one recession at a time.
Title: The Epistemological Case Against Free Trade
Weren’t all swans white until the discovery of Australia?
Didn’t Ireland had the comparative advantage in potato mono-culture until the Irish Potato Famine?
The problem with people like Warren is that when someone challenges their theories, they indulge in some special pleading, add an epicycle and simply end up muddying the waters.
‘Your “refutation” of Ricardo is laughable.’
You could be a bit more civil. This is why people don’t like to engage with libertarians, particularly Austrians.
‘Since England was more industrial, they would have a comparative advantage in the manufacture of wine presses. The productivity gains in both countries would enhance the purchasing power of everyone. The glut of wine presses in England would be exported.’
This has nothing to do with what he said. He was talking about a world where cloth and wine are being produced by Portugal and England, and pointing out that heterogenous capital causes problems in the short term. You have not challenged this idea; in fact, your scenario suffers from a similar problem as new wine presses would need to be created.
‘The Keynesian theory of everything presumes a rising price level, ie. a diminishing purchasing power as excess credit pursues degraded workers. Ricardo’s argument presumes honest money.’
Irrelevant.