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- <text id=93TT0540>
- <title>
- Nov. 15, 1993: Money Angles
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Nov. 15, 1993 A Christian In Winter:Billy Graham
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- MONEY ANGLES, Page 47
- Why NAFTA Is Good Medicine
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>ANDREW TOBIAS
- </p>
- <p> What a marvelous institution is this Congress of ours. There
- is a free-trade agreement up for approval, and almost everyone
- knows it's a good thing. All six living Presidents, Republican
- and Democrat, have come out strongly in favor of it. When was
- the last time that happened on anything? So, too, all 17 living
- American Nobel-prizewinning economists. And--here's what's
- great--even most of the members of Congress planning to vote
- against it are, privately, in favor of it!
- </p>
- <p> Free trade is, after all, a good thing. A world of free trade
- is far more likely to be prosperous (and peaceful) than a world
- of tariffs and barriers. A Mexico bustling with investment and
- growth is a Mexico far less likely to be spilling millions of
- its unemployed over into Texas and California, desperate for
- work.
- </p>
- <p> The great thing about Congress--what makes it so downright
- zany--is that what really matters is not what's right for
- the country, but what's right for the Congresspersons. They
- are only human.
- </p>
- <p> Take one fine young Democrat to whose campaigns I have always
- been pleased to contribute. She's planning to vote against NAFTA.
- She feels bad about this, she will tell you privately, but she's
- come under a lot of pressure from her constituents, and from
- labor unions in particular, so she feels her re-election prospects
- are better if she votes no. The latest poll shows a majority
- of her constituents are against NAFTA, and it's certainly not
- her place to speak up and educate them. That's what leaders
- are supposed to do, not Congresspersons.
- </p>
- <p> A Congressperson who wants to be re-elected follows the polls.
- Except when serious campaign money is involved, and then he
- or she generally follows the money. (Do you think the average
- Congressperson really believes 18-year-olds must have the "right"
- to buy handguns with silencers and armor-piercing bullets?)
- So if Lee Iacocca, who's joined the NAFTA push, can just get
- those poll numbers up--and happily, they're rising--then
- the Congresspersons will be able to vote yea. To many of them,
- this will be a relief.
- </p>
- <p> The problem with NAFTA is that, like almost any change, it will
- disrupt the lives of some Canadian workers, some American workers
- and some Mexican workers. They are a tiny minority, but anyone
- who thinks he or she might wind up in that tiny minority is
- understandably fearful and upset. And vocal. Compounding this,
- there are those who would play to those fears with demagoguery,
- rather than minister to them with reassurance and support.
- </p>
- <p> Over the long run, NAFTA will employ more of everybody--Americans,
- Mexicans and Canadians--and reduce prices for consumers. But
- undeniably, progress is not without cost. Peace is the same
- sort of problem: it throws some people out of work. But peace
- is so much more easily understood--and sold--than "free
- trade." We all know the costs of war. Just turn on the TV. It's
- less easy to see the costs of trade barriers. And of course
- they're less severe. But they're there. Just one example: surely
- Mexico's 20% tariff on American automobiles, which would be
- phased out under NAFTA, keeps Mexicans from buying American
- cars. Why is that good? Why doesn't Ross Perot mention it?
- </p>
- <p> I called another Democrat who plans to vote against NAFTA. I
- hardly needed to lecture him about economics; he has postgraduate
- degrees galore. Yet he sounded almost blase. The gist of his
- comment was that the past 12 years had been a time of high living
- on the backs of the working guy--one defeat for labor after
- another--so it was time to let labor win one. Congress would
- defeat NAFTA, he said. The President of Mexico would lose his
- job. They'd elect a new one, and in a year or two Canada, Mexico
- and the U.S. would negotiate another NAFTA that Congress would
- pass.
- </p>
- <p> And maybe he's right. Maybe it's no big deal if Mexico's President,
- who's made such strides toward democracy and private enterprise,
- is toppled and anti-American sentiment fueled. Maybe it's just
- politics as usual. Gad, what a depressing thought. But as a
- matter of fact, he's not right. This is a big deal. Where he
- is right is that the past 12 years were great for the rich and
- not so great for the working man. But President Clinton had
- that in mind in the way he attacked the deficit. Economically,
- a much higher energy tax and a much lower income tax hike would
- have made more sense. But that would have been tough on the
- middle class. So Clinton chose to skew the tax hike almost entirely
- the other way. For the typical working man or woman, the only
- hike was on gasoline: about $30 a year. But for those lucky
- enough to be making big bucks, there was that same $30 for gas--plus tens of thousands of dollars more. My own tax rate went
- up by 37% (not to 37%, by 37%--from 31% to 42.5%).
- </p>
- <p> If NAFTA were truly not in the overall, long-term interest of
- the American worker, my guess is Clinton would oppose it. Even
- as it was, he did not simply accept the document President Bush
- handed him. He insisted first on negotiating side agreements
- that speak to at least some of the concerns of environmentalists
- and labor.
- </p>
- <p> What this whole thing really seems to hinge on is the polls.
- If Lee Iacocca can enlist Rush Limbaugh to persuade his listeners
- to rally round NAFTA, and if the Gore-Perot debate is scored
- on the basis of who's more right and responsible rather than
- who's funnier, the poll numbers will rise and NAFTA will pass.
- </p>
- <p> It's not a great way to make economic policy, but it is, at
- least, wonderfully American.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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