There are a few historical stories about why the American ‘rust belt’ of industrial cities fell apart, and many of them contain fragments of the truth. The difficulty involved in unraveling all of them is that understanding exactly what happened with the enormous tangle of laws heaped upon the United States in the 20th century requires enough research to fill more than a dozen books. Understanding the intersections between labor law, environmental regulation, global trade law, monetary policy, changes in public attitudes, and more is just more complex than can be contained in a Michael Moore documentary.
I don’t expect to get through those in a blog post, but I’d like to outline my thoughts to be expanded upon later here. This is a follow up to my earlier post “Not Post-Industrial.”
The strongest argument that I can think of to roll back globalization is that, while in theory peaceful world trade is desirable, in practice, it requires an enormous empire, centralized international banking, and an inane tangle of foreign policy relationships to maintain for a large country like the US.
Libertarians will often argue that trade with China is enormously positive while simultaneously arguing that the United States should pull back from its foreign military bases and dismantle its blue water Navy. That same military-industrial complex is what pressures China to continue to trade with the US and accept American paper in return for tangible goods.
While it may be true — ignoring the costs of maintaining that quiet empire — that trade is positive — it’s stupid to ignore those costs, or to decry those costs as morally wrong, while praising the benefits.
It also assumes that peace is permanent, whereas history tells us that war — and continually swapping allegiances — is what’s normal in international relations. Formulating policies based on the assumption that world peace will be permanent is incredibly stupid.
So, why do manufacturers and other corporations prefer to send operations overseas — incurring shipping and coordination costs — rather than keep them closer to the domestic American market?
Labor Regulation
One chief reason, widely acknowledged, is that foreign countries often have laxer labor regulations and fewer wage controls. Labor unions also often have weaker or just rather different sets of legal rights in these foreign countries. Labor regulations tend to be quite popular in part because everyone in America learns in school that labor conditions for Americans before those regulations were put in place were “terrible,” ignoring that the 19th century was a period during which the American population exploded while becoming much more prosperous also, despite a massive civil war and a very weak position relative to the European empires.
Despite this widespread acknowledgment, there’s virtually no desire to roll back those regulations. Those regulations make the uncomfortable, strenuous, and dirty labor that often characterized America’s period of high growth illegal. There’s a marked tendency for a democratic people to prize comfort above everything else, and this transition is a good example of that principle in action.
The people want ‘industrial jobs,’ but they don’t want the pain, dirt, danger, and tedium that goes with those jobs. For that, they are happy to give those jobs to foreigners who will suffer the consequences — all the while griping about it.
Welfare Crowding Effect
If your choice is to either collect a welfare check or work 16-hour days in a dirty factory — and the amount of money you earn is roughly the same — you’d have to be a masochist to go in to the factory. This is one of the reasons why manufacturers often have trouble finding suitable workers despite widespread underemployment in the US. Because these programs are highly popular, and because they also have almost universal support among intellectuals, there is little chance of much welfare reform which isn’t motivated by imminent financial collapse.
Protectionism
Protectionist policies typically have the opposite of their intended effects. For example, the United States attempted to prop up U.S. Steel and other domestic producers even though they had stopped being economical under the weight of environmental and labor regulations. In the short run, it was good for the domestic producer which would have gone bankrupt. In the longer run, Japan and other marginal countries — which didn’t even have significant iron resources — managed to edge out American producers from the global market.
Protectionism tends to weaken companies and industries in the long run, depleting natural advantages. Even a champion boxer will become a wimp if you keep him locked up in a box, feed him nothing but cheese doodles, and forbid him from training.
Education Is Mostly Waste
Education tends to train young people in an entirely orthogonal direction to what their actual station in life will be. The best arguments for mass education were in terms of political formation rather than in preparation for work. Given the results of about one and a half centuries of mass education in the US, it’d be prudent to make dramatic changes in how the system works and tracks different classes of student. In countries like Switzerland, students tend to be tracked separately based on their capabilities — funneled into apprenticeships or the professions depending on their demonstrated capacities.
Attempting to funnel everyone — regardless of capability — into the professions is wasteful. It denies countless young people of a good path in life appropriate to their abilities and interests.
Tax Structure
Because highly successful capitalists tend to have the greatest influence in American legislation, we have a tax structure that favors established capital and that punishes workers — especially high wage workers. Warren Buffet’s quote about being taxed at a lower rate than his secretary is really all that needs to be said here.
Environmentalism
Environmentalism, while to some extent is necessary, has been implemented in such a way that pushes industry into foreign countries while pretending that science and technology have ‘advanced’ so as to make industry obsolete. Labor-intensive industries like textile manufacture tend to be done in poor countries rather than giving the domestic poor something to do with themselves other than collect welfare checks.
The ideology-religion of environmentalism also tends to favor large corporations which are capable of interfacing with the labyrinthine regulations over small producers who are critical to the innovation process. Environmentalism as a whole has also put the brakes on promising avenues of research and development like nuclear power generation — which could make many large sources of pollution actually obsolete.
Crime, Diversity, & Immigration
Industrial development requires a certain baseline of law and order. The Great Migration of African-Americans that began during World War II and ended in the years following the Civil Rights era also coincided with the collapse of Detroit, Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Newark, the Empire State cities, and more. The breakdown of law and order lead to the creation of the suburbs as a mass phenomenon. It also made it much more difficult to operate an industrial society which requires large, secure plants which can be physically sabotaged and require big physical supply lines.
The Great Migration was supposed to be a great story of African-Americans escaping the evil racist South and delivering stupendous growth to the Yankee industrial machine. Instead, many of those formerly great cities are now in ruins owing to the decline in public order.
If your trucks full of valuable inventory keep getting hijacked, it stops being possible to maintain heavy production. If your workers keep getting mugged on the way home from work, they won’t be able to continue working at the factory.
Factory owners also often use immigration to evade some of the other laws which curb production. It’s easier to evade the minimum wage and environmental regulations with illegal immigration laborers — they have an incentive to conceal violations of the law along with their employer, whereas citizens might be more eager to cooperate with the authorities. Immigrants themselves also tend to dissipate political order — make it more expensive — which further exacerbates some of the other issues mentioned in this section.
An excessively diverse workforce also requires the same sort of challenging political management at the micro level as it does at the macro level. The countless conflicts and factional difficulties that emerge when people have entirely different notions of how to live — and may speak different languages — is essentially an added tax on production.
Corporate leaders say that ‘diversity is a strength’ to comply with political directives, but we know that they would rather send heavy industry to more homogeneous nations thousands of miles away. Diversity is not a leading principle in China — rather, it’s more the opposite.
Antitrust Prevents Vertical Integration
Antitrust law encourages corporations to avoid ‘rolling up’ their suppliers to create vertically integrated companies. This makes it much easier for them to focus on single functions domestically — Nike mostly handles marketing, branding, and design while outsourcing production and retail. This outsourcing makes it more likely for them to just send orders to whichever factory provides the lowest bid. The efficiency that would come from vertical integration and a tighter feedback loop with the production side would be legally risky to undertake.
Monetary Policy & Banking
The most that I can say about contemporary monetary policy as compared to policy in the 1970s — the period of greatest US de-industrialization — is that it’s marginally less insane, or rather that it practices a different type of insanity.
Heavy industry requires long term investment. Long term investment requires a relatively predictable monetary environment for it to bear fruit. Otherwise, false monetary signals encourage people to build up industrial complexes which can’t be sustained. Industrial complexes which are unsustainable don’t build up into strong, stable economies.
Rollback Is Possible
If Deng Xiaoping could roll back much of the Maoist insanity of the 20th century, it should be also possible to roll back the Western economic insanity which has chased countless industries away.
Advocates of globalization tend to make it seem like an inevitable process rather than an unhappy consequence of misrule. Many advocates of globalization use it as a sort of patch for the difficulty of political reform in the Western world. They say to themselves “we know our home countries are all fucked up, but at least we can keep the show going by offshoring production and leaning on foreign leaders.”
This only remains a winning strategy so long as foreign leaders are pliant, their countries are stable, and the American military is globally dominant enough to ensure that foreigners continue to accept American commercial paper. Because this global dominance is fading, we also have to consider what must be done to adapt to the ongoing failure of globalization.
Doing that would require recognizing that Deng’s economic liberalization without ‘political liberalization’ was not actually aberrant. Political liberalization is what displaced the liberal economic order. People enjoyed the fruits of relatively free markets, but they hated the process that bore those fruits, and voted accordingly.
Essentially, what Western elites did over the course of the 20th century was to offshore the economic support mechanism for their governments, because it was both popular to do so and impossible to reform domestically. By spreading American paper all over the world, it also increased the effective tax base that the state could draw from through the process of monetary expansion. Given that this strategy has run up into diminishing returns and chaos, a dramatic rollback of the legal and cultural accumulation of the 20th century — and probably much of the 19th and 18th as well — is the only path that’s likely to work.