Border Unemployment

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As an avid reader, I’ve shopped at a store in Des Moines for years. It’s hard to believe that I’ve probably walked through its doors for the last time.

As much as I’ll miss the occasional visits to browse, the real tragedy involves the people who have showed up for work every day at one of America’s great retail chains. They must go, pure. Più di 10,000 are losing their jobs.

Now they’ll hunt for work in an economy that suffers from an unemployment rate of more than 9 per cento–and there’s no federal program called Bookshop Adjustment Assistance to help them.

Their plight calls attention to one of the stranger aspects of U.S. politica commerciale. Although congressional approval of three pending trade agreements would create jobs for these displaced workers, Washington won’t act because of a dispute over something called Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA), a program that benefits some unemployed Americans but not others.

In altre parole, Washington wants to lend a helping hand if your job crosses borders but not if you’ve just lost your job at Borders.

This is no way to conduct trade diplomacy. And it’s certainly no way to help people survive in a depressed economy.

I know what it’s like to lose a job because it no longer exists. As a former political professional, I’ve experienced what happens to campaign staffs after disappointing elections.

Borders employees face a similar dilemma. They’re the victims of large economic forces involving technology and consumer tasteand no matter how hard they worked to satisfy customers, there was probably nothing they could have done to save their company from its fate.

Their story is hardly unique. The digital revolution in music has devastated record-store employees. Companies like Netflix and Redbox have eliminated jobs for video-rental workers. Growing up on an Iowa family farm, I have vivid harvest memories of my mom driving the corn picker and my dad hauling loads of cornstill on the cobto store in a corn crib on our farm. When we needed the corn for livestock feed, my dad hired a local businessman who owned a corn sheller to remove the dried corn from the cob. John Deere’s ‘newcombine negated my dad’s need to hire the corn sheller for that dusty job!

It’s distressing to see good people lose jobs for any reason, but sometimes this is how progress works. Without the constant churning, we’d still be sending messages by telegraph and driving buggies to the farmer’s market. The upside is that our economy would have a place for lots of telegraph operators and buggy drivers. The downside is that none of us would have cell phones or cars.

Americans also can lose their jobs due to foreign competitionand when it happens, it’s not less fair or more painful than when they lose jobs for any other reason.

Yet Washington’s insistence on treating people who lose their jobs because of foreign competition as different from people who lose their jobs for other reasons now imperils three trade agreements that will help the entire U.S. economia.

The trade pacts with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea were negotiated by the Bush administration. President Obama has been calling for their congressional approval for a year and a half. Congressional majorities appear to favor them.

Everybody agrees that they’ll lead to a surge in U.S. esportazioni–along with more employment opportunities across a range of industries. There are real numbers to support this. The FTA between South Korea and the EU went into effect on July 1. The Wall Street Journal reported that in 2 weeks, trade between those two countries increased by 17.4 per cento. With an estimated export increase of about $13 billion when the US agreements with Colombia, Panama and S Korea go into effectwe’re talking real jobs and real money at no cost to our country. Now that’s how you begin to deal with a deficit!

Yet there’s a hang-up involving TAAand it could be a political deal killer. Some politicians insist that they won’t support the trade agreements unless the federal government also pumps additional funds into TAA. Others question its effectiveness and add that when Washington is busting through debt ceilings, we should try to trim spending rather than increase it.

I hope they figure out a way to approve these trade agreements, with or without TAA. They’re too important for our economyand especially for Americans who need jobs.

Allo stesso tempo, it seems odd that our lawmakers have let this dispute over a small segment of the unemployed delay action on a job-boosting measure that will help all people who need work, regardless of whether they’ve arrived at the misfortune of unemployment because of borders or Borders.

Mary Boote serves as the Executive Director for Truth About Trade & Tecnologia.

 

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Mary Boote funge da Amministratore Delegato del Farmer Global Network. Cresciuto in un caseificio di nord-ovest Iowa, Maiale, Mais, e fattoria di famiglia di soia, ha avuto il privilegio di servire l'agricoltura consigliere di Iowa governatore Terry E. Branstad da 1997-1999.

Attraverso il Global Farmer Network, Mary lavora con gli agricoltori di tutto il mondo per sviluppare e fornire piattaforme di comunicazione che coinvolgano la prospettiva e la voce degli agricoltori come parte integrante del dialogo sul sistema agroalimentare globale. La missione: Amplificare la voce degli agricoltori nella promozione del commercio, tecnologia, agricoltura sostenibile, crescita economica, e la sicurezza alimentare.

Nominato come uno dei Worldview 100: Il top del settore globale 100 Visionari e leader in biotecnologie di Scientific American visione del mondo in 2015, Mary ha avuto l'opportunità di viaggiare a livello internazionale, prestare servizio in missioni di leadership agricola incentrate su questioni tanto varie come l'istruzione sulla pianificazione strategica e la rappresentanza personale per gli agricoltori privatizzati nei paesi di recente indipendenza per saperne di più sui progetti di mais per piccoli coltivatori per osservare il processo di negoziazione commerciale presso l'Organizzazione mondiale del commercio.

Mary ha frequentato il Northwestern College, Orange City, Iowa e ha avuto il privilegio di partecipare al 2009 Seminario Harvard AgriBusiness.

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