Opponents of trade liberalization have sought to indict free
trade and trade agreements by painting a grim picture of the
economic state of American workers and households. They claim that
real wages have been stagnant or declining as millions of
higher-paying middle-class jobs are lost to imports. But the
reality for a broad swath of American workers and households is far
different and more benign.
Contrary to public perceptions:
Trade has had no discernible, negative effect on the number of
jobs in the U.S. economy. Our economy today is at full employment,
with 16.5 million more people working than a decade ago.
Trade accounts for only about 3 percent of dislocated
workers.Technology and other domestic factors displace far more
workers than does trade.
Average real compensation per hour paid to American workers,
which includes benefits as well as wages, has increased by 22
percent in the past decade.
Median household income in the United States is 6 percent
higher in real dollars than it was a decade ago at a comparable
point in the previous business cycle. Middle-class households have
been moving up the income ladder, not down.
The net loss of 3.3 million manufacturing jobs in the past
decade has been overwhelmed by a net gain of 11.6 million jobs in
sectors where the average wage is higher than in manufacturing.
Two-thirds of the net new jobs created since 1997 are in sectors
where workers earn more than in manufacturing.
The median net worth of U.S. households jumped by almost
one-third between 1995 and 2004, from $70,800 to $93,100.
The large majority of Americans, including the typical
middle-class family, is measurably better off today after a decade
of healthy trade expansion.
A spirited defense of free trade which tells the underreported story of how a more global U.S. economy has created better jobs and higher living standards for American workers.