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Economic Policy Institute (September 28, 2006) Twelve years under the rules of the North American Free Trade Agreement, or NAFTA, has had a perverse impact on the distribution of income, wealth, and political power across the continent. A new three-country report shows
that NAFTA has not lived up to its promise of better jobs
and faster growth for Mexico, Canada, and the United States.
Instead it has promoted an integrated continental economy
with rules set by and for the benefit of the political and
economic elite. NAFTA Revisited, a report released today by the Economic Policy Institute, details the trade deal’s effects on the economies, working people and the labor markets of all three nations. Jeff Faux, EPI Distinguished
Fellow and author of The Global Class War, states in the Mexico NAFTA’s preamble promised
sustained growth of the member countries—particularly in NAFTA increased employment in
the low-wage “maquiladora” industries of Mexico, with the
benefits flowing mainly to large companies, the financial
sector, and a thin layer of administrative and professional
workers earning high salaries. Despite steady growth of Meanwhile, the agricultural sector has suffered a large and steady loss of employment due to NAFTA. The share of the population engaged in agricultural activities fell from 26.8% in 1991 to 16.4% in 2004, a significant decrease. “NAFTA must be revised in order to create a social fund that stimulates the development of infrastructure and employment in the country as a whole and especially in Mexico’s most marginalized regions,” said Mr. Salas. “Mexico’s experience should serve as a warning concerning the dangers of any trade agreement, bilateral or multilateral, which is similar to NAFTA.” Canada NAFTA promised Canada increased
economic growth, income, and employment across all sectors,
regions, and income groups; closure of the longstanding
productivity gap with the United States; the creation of a
more diversified, efficient, and more knowledge-based
economy; and, an economy that would maintain and strengthen
the generous Canadian social model. Under NAFTA’s rules, Canada has lowered the government’s spending on individuals and social programs while real incomes have virtually stagnated, except for those at the top. Average income has registered the worst performance of any comparable period since World War II, and inequality (after taxes and transfers) has grown for the first time since the 1920s. The productivity gap with the United States, which was supposed to narrow under free trade, has in fact widened. Canadian labor productivity (GDP per hour worked) rose steadily in relation to U.S. productivity during the 1960s and 1970s, peaking at 92% of the U.S. level in 1984. Thereafter, it slid to 89% in 1989 and by 2005 had fallen to just 82% of U.S. productivity—below where it was in 1961. “At its core, NAFTA is about
shifting the power in the economy from government to United States EPI economist Robert Scott documents the job displacement and declining job quality that NAFTA imposed on the U.S. economy. Growing trade deficits with Mexico and Canada after NAFTA took effect reduced employment in high-wage, traded-goods industries, resulting in a substantial loss of income for such workers. Growing trade deficits with Mexico and Canada have displaced production that supported 1,015,291 U.S. jobs since NAFTA took effect in 1994. The displacement of 1 million jobs from traded to non-traded goods industries reduced wage payments to U.S. workers by $7.6 billion in 2004 alone.
“Growing trade deficits with
Mexico and Canada under NAFTA contributed to inequality in
wages and falling demand for workers without a
post-secondary education, males in trade-related production,
and minorities,” said Scott. The
Economic
Policy Institute is a nonprofit, nonpartisan think tank
that seeks to broaden the public debate about strategies to
achieve a prosperous and fair economy.To see the full study,
go to http://www.epi.org/content.cfm/bp173 |