In
Praise of Cheap Labor
By Paul Krugman|
For
many years a huge Manila garbage dump known as Smokey Mountain was a favorite
media symbol of Third World poverty. Several thousand men, women, and children
lived on that dump--enduring the stench, the flies, and the toxic waste in
order to make a living combing the garbage for scrap metal and other
recyclables. And they lived there voluntarily, because the $10 or so a squatter
family could clear in a day was better than the alternatives.
The squatters are gone now,
forcibly removed by Philippine police last year as a cosmetic move in advance
of a Pacific Rim summit. But I found myself thinking about Smokey Mountain
recently, after reading my latest batch of hate mail.
The occasion was an op-ed
piece I had written for the New York Times, in
which I had pointed out that while wages and working conditions in the new
export industries of the Third World are appalling, they are a big improvement
over the "previous, less visible rural poverty." I guess I should
have expected that this comment would generate letters along the lines of,
"Well, if you lose your comfortable position as an American professor you
can always find another job--as long as you are 12 years old and willing to
work for 40 cents an hour."
Such moral outrage is common
among the opponents of globalization--of the transfer of technology and capital
from high-wage to low-wage countries and the resulting growth of
labor-intensive Third World exports. These critics take it as a given that
anyone with a good word for this process is naive or corrupt and, in either
case, a de facto agent of global capital in its oppression of workers here and
abroad.
But matters are not that
simple, and the moral lines are not that clear. In fact, let me make a
counter-accusation: The lofty moral tone of the opponents of globalization is
possible only because they have chosen not to think their position through.
While fat-cat capitalists might benefit from globalization, the biggest
beneficiaries are, yes, Third World workers.
After all, global poverty is
not something recently invented for the benefit of multinational corporations.
Let's turn the clock back to the Third World as it was only two decades ago
(and still is, in many countries). In those days, although the rapid economic
growth of a handful of small Asian nations had started to attract attention,
developing countries like Indonesia or Bangladesh were still mainly what they
had always been: exporters of raw materials, importers of manufactures. Inefficient
manufacturing sectors served their domestic markets, sheltered behind import
quotas, but generated few jobs. Meanwhile, population pressure pushed desperate
peasants into cultivating ever more marginal land or seeking a livelihood in
any way possible--such as homesteading on a mountain of garbage.
Given this lack of other
opportunities, you could hire workers in Jakarta or Manila for a pittance. But
in the mid-'70s, cheap labor was not enough to allow a developing country to
compete in world markets for manufactured goods. The entrenched advantages of
advanced nations--their infrastructure and technical know-how, the vastly
larger size of their markets and their proximity to suppliers of key
components, their political stability and the subtle-but-crucial social
adaptations that are necessary to operate an efficient economy--seemed to
outweigh even a tenfold or twentyfold disparity in wage rates.
A nd then something
changed. Some combination of factors that we still don't fully understand--lower tariff barriers,
improved telecommunications, cheaper air transport--reduced the disadvantages
of producing in developing countries. (Other things being the same, it is still
better to produce in the First World--stories of companies that moved production
to Mexico or East Asia, then moved back after experiencing the disadvantages of
the Third World environment, are common.) In a substantial number of
industries, low wages allowed developing countries to break into world markets.
And so countries that had previously made a living selling jute or coffee
started producing shirts and sneakers instead.
Workers in those shirt and
sneaker factories are, inevitably, paid very little and expected to endure
terrible working conditions. I say "inevitably" because their
employers are not in business for their (or their workers') health; they pay as
little as possible, and that minimum is determined by the other opportunities
available to workers. And these are still extremely poor countries, where
living on a garbage heap is attractive compared with the alternatives.
And yet, wherever the new
export industries have grown, there has been measurable improvement in the
lives of ordinary people. Partly this is because a growing industry must offer
a somewhat higher wage than workers could get elsewhere in order to get them to
move. More importantly, however, the growth of manufacturing--and of the
penumbra of other jobs that the new export sector creates--has a ripple effect
throughout the economy. The pressure on the land becomes less intense, so rural
wages rise; the pool of unemployed urban dwellers always anxious for work
shrinks, so factories start to compete with each other for workers, and urban
wages also begin to rise. Where the process has gone on long enough--say, in
South Korea or Taiwan--average wages start to approach what an American
teen-ager can earn at McDonald's. And eventually people are no longer eager to
live on garbage dumps. (Smokey Mountain persisted because the Philippines,
until recently, did not share in the export-led growth of its neighbors. Jobs
that pay better than scavenging are still few and far between.)
The
benefits of export-led economic growth to the mass of people in the newly
industrializing economies are not a matter of conjecture. A country like
Indonesia is still so poor that progress can be measured in terms of how much
the average person gets to eat; since 1970, per capita intake has risen from
less than 2,100 to more than 2,800 calories a day. A shocking one-third of young
children are still malnourished--but in 1975, the fraction was more than half.
Similar improvements can be seen throughout the Pacific Rim, and even in places
like Bangladesh. These improvements have not taken place because well-meaning
people in the West have done anything to help--foreign aid, never large, has
lately shrunk to virtually nothing. Nor is it the result of the benign policies
of national governments, which are as callous and corrupt as ever. It is the
indirect and unintended result of the actions of soulless multinationals and
rapacious local entrepreneurs, whose only concern was to take advantage of the
profit opportunities offered by cheap labor. It is not an edifying spectacle;
but no matter how base the motives of those involved, the result has been to
move hundreds of millions of people from abject poverty to something still
awful but nonetheless significantly better.
Why, then, the outrage of my
correspondents? Why does the image of an Indonesian sewing sneakers for 60
cents an hour evoke so much more feeling than the image of another Indonesian
earning the equivalent of 30 cents an hour trying to feed his family on a tiny
plot of land--or of a Filipino scavenging on a garbage heap?
The main answer, I think, is a
sort of fastidiousness. Unlike the starving subsistence farmer, the women and
children in the sneaker factory are working at slave wages for our benefit--and this makes us feel unclean. And so
there are self-righteous demands for international labor standards: We should
not, the opponents of globalization insist, be willing to buy those sneakers
and shirts unless the people who make them receive decent wages and work under
decent conditions.
This sounds only fair--but is
it? Let's think through the consequences.
First of all, even if we could
assure the workers in Third World export industries of higher wages and better
working conditions, this would do nothing for the peasants, day laborers,
scavengers, and so on who make up the bulk of these countries' populations. At
best, forcing developing countries to adhere to our labor standards would
create a privileged labor aristocracy, leaving the poor majority no better off.
And it might not even do that.
The advantages of established First World industries are still formidable. The
only reason developing countries have been able to compete with those
industries is their ability to offer employers cheap labor. Deny them that
ability, and you might well deny them the prospect of continuing industrial
growth, even reverse the growth that has been achieved. And since
export-oriented growth, for all its injustice, has been a huge boon for the
workers in those nations, anything that curtails that growth is very much
against their interests. A policy of good jobs in principle, but no jobs in
practice, might assuage our consciences, but it is no favor to its alleged
beneficiaries.
You may say that the wretched
of the earth should not be forced to serve as hewers of wood, drawers of water,
and sewers of sneakers for the affluent. But what is the alternative? Should
they be helped with foreign aid? Maybe--although the historical record of
regions like southern Italy suggests that such aid has a tendency to promote
perpetual dependence. Anyway, there isn't the slightest prospect of significant
aid materializing. Should their own governments provide more social justice? Of
course--but they won't, or at least not because we tell them to. And as long as
you have no realistic alternative to industrialization based on low wages, to
oppose it means that you are willing to deny desperately poor people the best
chance they have of progress for the sake of what amounts to an aesthetic
standard--that is, the fact that you don't like the idea of workers being paid
a pittance to supply rich Westerners with fashion items.
In short, my correspondents
are not entitled to their self-righteousness. They have not thought the matter
through. And when the hopes of hundreds of millions are at stake, thinking
things through is not just good intellectual practice. It is a moral duty.
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