The biggest challenge, when I talk to politicians about the free-market agenda, is convincing them that they should restrain the growth of government. To be more specific, I think they often understand and accept the argument that ever-rising fiscal burdens are bad for a nation’s economic and moral health, but they are afraid that voters and interest groups will kick them out of office if they reduce the size and scope of the public sector.
I have a different challenge when talking to ordinary people about the free-market agenda. They’re quite comfortable (at least in theory) with the notion that it’s good to cap the growth of government spending, but there is a lot of skepticism about trade. And their doubts sometimes persist even after I share my eight questions and five charts showing the folly of protectionism.
In part, I think these skeptics share Trump’s mistaken belief that a trade deficit is a sign of weakness. But I’ve also found in my many conversations that some people simply are not comfortable with globalization.
But what does that concept even mean?
In his latest column for the New York Times, Bret Stephens points out that there’s no clear definition of what it means to be pro-globalist.
I grew up in Mexico City… Since then, I have lived in Chicago, London, Brussels, Jerusalem, New York and Hamburg. I suppose this makes me a “globalist” in certain eyes…
To be a globalist means almost nothing — even “Davos Man” has to trundle home somewhere after the annual forum draws to a close. Rex Tillerson is as much a globalist as Samantha Power. Ditto for John Bolton and John Kerry, Charles Koch and George Soros, Mike Pompeo and Julian Assange. A term that embraces opposites has almost no explanatory power.
So he suggests a definition of what it means.
Maybe it’s time now to make “globalist” mean something after all. An earlier generation of globalists — they called themselves internationalists — had learned the lessons of the 1930s and understood that the U.S. could not cut itself off from the world and expect to remain safe from it. Successive generations of Americans — military and foreign-service officers, businessmen and teachers, humanitarians and entertainers — went out into the world and sought to make it a better place.
All of that sounds very appealing.
Especially when compared to what it means to be on the other side.
To be an anti-globalist…does specify something. …In short, anti-globalism is economic illiteracy married to a conspiracy mind-set.
Since I’ve written about the foolishness of protectionism and also explained why it’s silly to believe in conspiracy theories, I obviously agree.
But we have a problem. Globalism (or globalization, or internationalism, or the policies of “Davos Man,”, or whatever you want to call it) increasingly is perceived to be about more than free trade and comity between nations. In the minds of market-oriented people, it is getting linked with other policies that cause considerable angst.
- Does globalism mean supporting the OECD’s efforts to undermine tax competition so that it’s easier for politicians to impose bad tax policy and more redistribution?
- Does globalism mean agreeing with the IMF’s support for bailouts and higher taxes, policies which arguably are only for the benefit of politically connected big banks?
- Does globalism mean adding regulatory harmonization to trade agreements, supplanting the much more market-friendly approach of mutual recognition?
- Does globalism mean signing onto agreements that give powers to unaccountable and corrupt international bureaucracies such as the United Nations?
- Does globalism mean siding with the European Commission in imposing one-size-fits-all rules for member nations notwithstanding the subsidiarity principle?
This is why I find this issue so frustrating.
Like Bret Stephens, I consider myself a globalist. To me, it’s a way of saying I want peaceful trade and investment flows between people in different nations. Heck, it’s also a way of saying I like and appreciate other peoples and other cultures.
But many of the other people who self-identify as globalists support policies that increase the power of governments over the private economy.
Here’s my simplified way to looking at this issues. All globalists are in favor of free trade and cross-border investment flows, but there’s then a division based on whether they want governments to compete or collude. And that’s basically a proxy for whether they favor small government or big government.
In this 2×2 matrix, the globalists are on the left side, but they’re divided between “Good Globalism” and “Bad Globalism.” Sort of the difference between Switzerland and Sweden.
I initially identified the bottom-right as “Anti Globalism,” but decided that “Statism” was the better label. After all, there should be a place for those who want global agreements to expand the power of government while also closing borders to trade and investment. Maybe India would be a good example of this bad approach.
But I couldn’t figure out a good label for the top-right. So I put “Irrationality” for the obvious reason that competition and protectionism are mutually exclusive concepts. And I have no idea what country belongs in this box.
P.S. This is my first stab at this issue. I’m open to suggestions on better labels and descriptions for my 2×2 matrix. And I also freely admit that there are aspects of the globalization debate – such as migration and military alliances – that aren’t included in my analysis. I’ll let others figure out how to create and classify a 4-dimensional matrix.
P.P.S. Not all global agreements are bad. Consider international pacts on air traffic control. Or certain anti-pollution treaties.
P.P.P.S. For more information on today’s topic, here’s my explanation of how borders can promote liberty, and here’s my explanation for why protectionism and tax harmonization are two peas in a pod.
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anytime another country engages in an activity that we do not approve of… they are subject to economic “sanctions”… so… politics are the overriding force of globalization? not economic policy? I just know that with the awesome intellectual capacity and moral fiber of the political class… they will lead us to unrestricted free trade… and total economic freedom…………. I just know it!
“There is Good Globalism and Bad Globalism. ” While it’s true that I have wandered off the Libertarian reservation by supporting tariffs, I can still appreciate the points you make enough to want to call my approach “Neo-Protectionism,” and not mere Protectionism. I think I feel the way Larry Kudlow might be feeling, that I don’t like tariffs because they are taxes, but, in the big scheme of things, they fit in with the rest of my political views better than income taxes and carbon taxes.
There is Good Globalism and Bad Globalism.
From a macro perspective it boils down to a rather simple description:
Globalization as in free movement of products, capital, and people is a good thing that promotes competition, economic efficiency and evolution. Globalization, harmonization and homogenization of government, legislation, regulation, legal systems, and culture is a bad thing that stifles competition, economic efficiency and evolution.
Of course, the typical statist is all against Good Globalism and all for Bad Globalism: A universal world government where majoritarian world vote decides when, where and how products, capital, and people move from where to where and under what conditions.
Alas, it is so suboptimal that it won’t happen — but those who get caught in that system will be left in the dust of our now irreversibly exponentially growing and accelerating world.
Hence, stay mobile.
P.S. I’m not sure if tariffs are Trump’s belief or if he simply believes that tariffs will get him reelected.
PPS. The top right quadrant is not exactly irrational. It is a world where the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact lives.
PPPS. Perhaps one silver lining of tariffs is that the discord moves us a bit further away from the trend towards global government, i.e. coordinated global statism.
The Globalists are using their own idea of “Free” trade as a jackhammer to weaken and destroy nations and replace them with one great big fat giant globalist non-government secret society that will administer “governance.”
Libertarians are naïve at best and disingenuous at worst when they say that destroying nations will destroy “statism.” The main philosophical reason that I cannot caucus politically with “Libertarians” is this misunderstanding regarding Nationalism and Statism. The way “Libertarians” talk about Statism they sound just like a lot of their more intelligent critics say they are, i.e. advocates of an anarchy that amounts to living in a jungle instead of a civilization.
In the jungle, there’s no such thing as moral principles. In the jungle, there is only eat or be eaten. In the jungle it’s a doggy dog world, as a philosopher once put it.
One can believe a lot of things, but that doesn’t mean they are not mistaken.
There’s a difference between a jungle and a free market of free and civilized people operating under the rule law. In the jungle, there’s no such thing as stealing, neither is there any such thing as murder. In the jungle, you hit the other guy over the head with your mastodon’s jaw bone and take his stuff. In a free market, you negotiate an exchange, and if the other guy refuses, and you hit him on the head and take his stuff anyway, an independent board of inquiry investigates the matter and then hangs you by your neck until you are dead.
The board of inquiry is independent of the parties directly involved, but is not independent of the people in general, nor their principles of truth and justice on which their civilization is based.
You are assuming that NAFTA equals free trade. It does not. NAFTA is as much ‘managed trade’ as free trade. True free trade would not require lengthy documents.
Yes, true free trade is an ideal that rarely occurs. But we also don’t have true free-market capitalism.
One can believe in free trade and nations.
“Free trade means government does not interfere, and private sector participants decide themselves if they will buy or sell. ”
If that’s the case, then why did the NAFTA agreement need thousands of pages? Why do all these “free” trade agreements need so much paperwork, and why do they set up bureaucratic control and enforcement mechanisms?
The truth that doctrinaire “libertarians” miss is that what is called “free trade” is still being managed by “statists,” but instead of being managed at the national level where regular people can have some sort of influence on the policies, it’s being managed by International organizations, by Internationalists, otherwise known as our friends, the Globalists.
If you hate statism, then, you ought to hate Globalist statism most of all, because it is much worse and far more demonic and satanic than mere Nationalist statism.
We don’t get rid of statism by getting rid of Nations, we only push it to a higher more destructive and more dangerous and out of control level.
Christine,
Free trade is not “big government taking control of trade/tariffs and doing what’s best for the statists and the social justice crowd.” In fact, it is the opposite.
Free trade means government does not interfere, and private sector participants decide themselves if they will buy or sell.
Managed trade or protectionism is when govt steps in with tariffs. We should be skeptical of government’s ability to adequately decide when to apply tariffs, when to remove them, how high the tariffs should be, and which products should have tariffs.
When government decides those things, that’s exactly what gives statists power. Politicians decide who will get favors and who won’t. This is where corruption and cronyism live.
I suspect you still may not like free trade, but you should at least understand this point. Free trade diminishes the power of government.
“Free Trade” makes sense within a political unity, such as, for example, between the 50 United States of America. There are 50 separate states with separate governments which have their reserved powers, but since the commerce clause gives the power of regulating interstate trade to the central government, we can legally have free trade, and political unity allows it to work the way free trade theorists say it should work. But when the “states” with free trade are separate and sovereign and completely independent nations, with extremely diverse interests, free trade doesn’t work, at least not for the benefit of the people in general, but instead will function to aggrandize a certain narrow element of special interests who are in position to take advantage of the economic imbalances that occur.
Look at how the doctrinaire “Libertarians” harp endlessly on the “statism” of tariffs. They think the world can function as an anarchy, and they are blind to the damage done to those who foolishly live in anarchy when their enemies are highly organized and disciplined in array against them.
“Free trade” is just another way of saying “open borders”. NAFTA trade agreements, etc have devastated our manufacturing base and “Globalism” is just big government taking control of trade/tariffs and doing what’s best for the “statists” and the “social justice” crowd while we “nationalists” are left to fend for ourselves with higher taxes, fewer jobs (because of illegal immigration), and a totally corrupted political system that has strayed so far from what our Founding Fathers envisioned for our country that I’m sure they are turning over in their graves! I’m so disappointed in your position on this topic Dan. I usually look to you for a point of view that is rational, practical, and based on our Constitutional Republic’s laws. I would suggest you re-think this topic.
“a conspiracy mind-set?”
Oh, so, the richest most powerful most greedy people in the world, who also happen to believe in socialism and real honest to God totalitarian statism, don’t get together and make private agreements on how to divide up the spoils of the world?
OK, then.
A group of bank robbers might conspire to rob a bank and share the loot, but, a bunch of Banksters would never rob the world and share the loot?
Gotcha.
I’m gonna have to disagree on that one, as I *feel* it’s a very naïve way of looking at the way the world really works.
A great example of bad globalism would be the UN and the EU. There is no need to interpret Free Trade with all kind of regulatory and control. Then it is no longer free. Worst, it becomes political in nature.