speeches · June 1, 1999
Speech
Alan Greenspan · Chair
For release on delivery
1:00 p.m. EDT
June 2, 1999
Remarks by
Alan Greenspan
Chairman
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
before the
Alliance for the Commonwealth
Conference on International Business
Boston, Massachusetts
June 2, 1999
I am pleased to join the Alliance for the Commonwealth today for its annual Conference
on International Business. I should also like to thank my good friends John LaWare, Chairman
of the Alliance, and Cathy Minehan, President of the Boston Federal Reserve Bank, who
encouraged me to participate in this daylong educational symposium.
There are few better examples of the benefits of trade and investment than here in Boston
where the roots of international trade go back to our nation's origins. Massachusetts, and New
England in general, are today, as in the past, actively engaged in the global trade environment
and are currently home to many of the firms that are the recipients or the sources of cross-border
direct investment.
The evidence is overwhelmingly persuasive that the massive increase in world
competition—a consequence of broadening trade flows—has fostered markedly higher standards
of living for almost all countries who have participated in cross-border trade. I include most
especially the United States. And yet, as I have indicated in recent speeches and intend to outline
shortly, there are reasons to be concerned that the benefits of increasingly open trade may not be
allowed to be as readily forthcoming in the future as they have been in the past half century.
Although many forces have been at play, the post World War II surge in trade has clearly
owed, in large part, to significant advances in technological innovation.
Since the dawn of the industrial revolution, there has been an inexorable drive to leverage
physical brawn and material resources into ever greater value added or output. New insights into
the laws of nature brought steam and later electric power. The development of a production
quality level that facilitated interchangeable parts brought assembly line production. And the
development of railroads facilitated the evolution of mass markets.
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Almost all of the leverage of the physical to higher value added has reflected the
substitution of ideas—new insights—for material bulk and brute human effort.
The resulting more effective organization of material has, of course, inevitably meant
that less of it was needed per unit of output. The insights of metallurgy and architectural and
engineering design, for example, enabled the construction of buildings that use far less physical
material per unit of space than say, a half century ago. The insights that led to central heating, as
well as synthetic fiber, facilitated reduced clothing weight, while the development of the jet
engine brought far greater annual passenger miles per unit of aircraft size.
But doubtless it has been the advent in recent decades of the synergies of the
microprocessor, lasers, and fiber optics that has fostered a distinct quickening in the
displacement of physical weight of output with concepts. The ability to miniaturize transistor
electronic circuits has displaced huge tonnages of copper and enhanced the speed of calculation
that the miniaturization of circuitry facilitated.
As high tech became an increasing part of our national product the relative physical
dimensions of our value added fell dramatically. The per capita physical weight of our gross
domestic product is evidently only scarcely higher today than it was fifty or one hundred years
ago.
By far the largest contributor to growth of our price adjusted GDP, or value added, has
been ideas—insights that leveraged physical reality. The consequent downsizing of output, of
course, meant that products were easier, and hence less costly, to move, and most especially
across national borders.
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It is thus not surprising that the price adjusted level of international trade, as I indicated
earlier, has expanded at a far faster pace than gains in real domestic demand. Imports of goods
and services as a percent of gross domestic products worldwide, on average, have risen from
approximately 14 percent twenty-five years ago to 24 percent today.
The growth in physical weight of such trade, as with the national product generally, has
been far less. For example, United States data on both exports and imports indicates that the
price adjusted value of our trade per pound has risen by approximately 4 percent per year on
average over those same three decades.
But technology has augmented international trade for reasons beyond the downsizing of
material output. New telecommunications technologies made it very difficult for the autarchic
societies of the former Soviet Union to sustain their isolation in the face of the growing relative
affluence of the West. News could no longer be bottled up. Even in the West, the stultification
of protectionism became increasingly evident as new consumer products entered the world
markets en masse. The political pressures to deregulate moribund industries and open up borders
to trade soon became irresistible. The international trading system that evolved has enhanced
competition and fostered the continuous scrapping of old technologies to make way for the new.
Standards of living rise because the depreciation and other cash flows of industries employing
older, increasingly obsolescent, technologies are marshaled to finance the newly produced capital
assets that almost always embody the cutting edge technologies. This is the process by which
wealth is created incremental step by incremental step. It presupposes a continuous churning of
an economy in which the new displaces the old.
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But there is also little doubt that this transition to the new high-tech economy, of which
rising trade is a part, is proving difficult for a large segment of our workforce that interfaces with
our rapidly changing capital stock day-by-day.
Moreover, while major advances in standards of living are evident among virtually all
nations that have opened their borders to increased competition, the adjustment trauma has also
distressed those who once thrived in companies that were then at the cutting edge of technology,
but which have since become increasingly less competitive in both domestic and foreign markets.
Economists will say that workers should move from the steel districts of western Pennsylvania to
a vibrant Silicon Valley. And eventually they, or more likely, their children, will. But the
adjustment process is wrenching to an existing workforce made redundant largely through no
fault of their own. It may be argued that all workers should have the foresight to recognize
long-term job opportunity shifts and move in advance of obsolescence. This regrettably is a skill
not in great abundance—among business managers or the economists who counsel them, as well
as among workers.
Yet the protectionist propensity to thwart the process of the competitive flow of capital,
from failing technologies to the more productive, is unwise and surely self-defeating. History
tells us that not only is it unwise to try to hold back innovations, it is also not possible over the
longer run. Generation after generation has experienced episodes in which the technologically
obsolescent endeavored to undermine progress, often appealing to the very real short-term costs
of adjusting to a changing economic environment. From the Luddites to the Smoots and the
Hawleys, competitive forces were under attack. In the end they did not prevail and long-term
advances in standards of living resumed.
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Nonetheless, the campaign to expand free trade is never won. Legislation to further lower
trade barriers, for example, is becoming increasingly more difficult to pass in our Congress. It is
a continuing battle. Further, while tariffs in industrial countries have come down sharply over
the past half century, other barriers have become more prevalent. Administrative protection in
the form of antidumping suits and countervailing duties is a case in point. While these forms of
protection have often been imposed under the label of promoting "fair trade," oftentimes they are
just simple guises for inhibiting competition. Typically, antidumping duties are levied when
foreign average prices are below average cost of production. But that also describes a practice
that often emerges as a wholly appropriate response to a softening in demand. It is the rare case
that prices fall below marginal cost, which would be a more relevant standard. Antidumping
initiatives should be reserved, in the view of many economists, for those cases where
anticompetitive behavior is involved. Contrary to popular notions about antidumping suits,
under U.S. and WTO law, it is not required to show evidence of predatory behavior, or intention
to monopolize, or of any other intentional efforts to drive competitors out of business.
In the end it is clear that all economic progress rests on competition. It would be a great
tragedy were we to stop the wheels of progress because of an incapacity to assist the victims of
progress.
Our efforts should be directed at job skills enhancement and retraining—a process in
which the private market is already engaged. Thwarting competition, by placing barriers to
imports, will prevent the needed transitions of the productive capital stock of the United States
and other nations that enable it to continuously concentrate on producing those goods and
services most desired by consumers. Protectionism will also slow the inevitable transition of the
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workforce to more productive endeavors. To be sure, an added few years may enable some
workers to reach retirement with dignity, but it will also keep frozen in place younger workers
whose better job opportunities decline with time.
I regret that trade policy has been inextricably linked with job creation. We try to
promote free trade on the mistaken ground that it will create jobs. The reason should be that it
enhances standards of living through the effects of competition on productivity.
It is difficult to find credible evidence that trade has impacted the level of total
employment in this country over the long run. Indeed, we are currently experiencing the widest
trade deficit in history with a level of unemployment close to record lows.
Certainly, the distribution of jobs by industry is affected by international trade, but it is
also affected by domestic trade. It is the relative balance of supply and demand in a competitive
market economy that determines the mix of employment. When exports fall or imports rise,
domestic demand and relative prices have invariably adjusted in the long run to leave total
employment relatively unaffected. As economists like to say, all imports are eventually paid for
with exports.
I also regret that, despite the remarkable success over a near half century of GATT, the
General Agreement on Trade and Tariffs, and its successor, the World Trade Organization, in
reducing trade barriers, our trade laws and negotiating practices are essentially adversarial. They
presume that a trade concession extracted from us by our trading partners is to their advantage at
our expense, and must be countered.
Few economists see the world that way. And I am rash enough to suggest that we
economists are correct, at least in this regard: trade is not a zero sum game.
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If trade barriers are lowered by both parties, each clearly benefits. But if one lowers
barriers and the other does not, the country that lowered barriers unilaterally would still be better
off having done so. Raising barriers to achieve protectionist equality with reluctant trading
partners would be neither to our benefit, nor to theirs. The best of all possible worlds for
competition is for both parties to lower trade barriers. The worst is for both to keep them up.
For these reasons, I am concerned about the recent evident weakening of support for free
trade in this country. Should we endeavor to freeze competitive progress in place, we will almost
certainly slow economic growth overall, and impart substantial harm to those workers who
would otherwise seek more effective longer-term job opportunities. Protecting markets from
new technologies has never succeeded. Adjustments to newer technologies have been delayed,
but only at significant cost.
Even should our trading partners not retaliate in the face of increased American trade
barriers, an unlikely event, we do ourselves great harm by lessening the vigor of American
competitiveness. The United States has been in the forefront of the postwar opening up of
international markets, much to our, and the rest of the world's, benefit.
It would be a great tragedy were that process reversed. I do not believe that will be
allowed to happen. There is too much at stake for us and our trading partners.
Cite this document
APA
Alan Greenspan (1999, June 1). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19990602_greenspan
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19990602_greenspan,
author = {Alan Greenspan},
title = {Speech},
year = {1999},
month = {Jun},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19990602_greenspan},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}