Here’s a letter to a respected friend – who, by the way, is no protectionist.
Tim:
Thanks for your feedback on my letter to the New York Times; it’s always good to hear from you.
You write that I’m “too glib” in questioning the claim that, as the NYT favorably summarized new research, “American workers in communities that were more exposed to competition from Mexican imports saw a significant shortening of their life spans after the trade deal went into effect in 1994.” You give as a hypothetical example a middle-age factory worker who, having lost his job to Mexican imports, commits suicide or becomes an alcoholic.
I’ll defend myself. I never questioned the finding that, in areas subject to increased foreign competition, mortality rates rose. Nor, of course, did I ever I make light of rising mortality. Instead, I questioned the accuracy of blaming this misfortune on trade.
The period studied by the researchers is 1994 through 2008. The St. Louis Fed has data starting in December 2000 on total monthly layoffs and discharges – that is, for 97 of the 180 months covered by the research. During those 97 months, an average of 1.9 million workers in America every month lost or were laid off from jobs they wanted to keep.
How much of this job destruction was caused by NAFTA? The Economic Policy Institute – an outfit hostile to NAFTA – estimates that over the course of NAFTA’s first 20 years, that trade agreement destroyed a total of 700,000 jobs. Even assuming that all of those 700,000 jobs were destroyed in the first 15 years of NAFTA, that’s an average monthly job loss of only 3,900 – or 0.2% of the average total monthly layoffs and discharges during this period. If we add to this number the maximum estimated average monthly job loss caused by the “China Shock” – 15,385 – we find that the average number of jobs destroyed monthly by these two much-criticized and most disparaged sources of increased imports is 19,285 – or 1.0% of total layoffs and discharges.
Most job destruction in the U.S. is caused, not by trade, but by labor-saving technology, changes in consumer preferences, and ordinary, healthy domestic competition. And yet, although this job destruction is massive and has long been on-going, we Americans don’t seem to be killing ourselves in great numbers because of it.
Why would the relatively tiny number of job losses due to trade uniquely increase mortality? I can think of no good reason. The researchers will say that there’s something special about manufacturing jobs, and that manufacturing jobs are disproportionately hit by trade. But the rate of layoffs and discharges in manufacturing was higher during manufacturing’s alleged ‘golden era’ – before America was much-exposed to global markets – than it was during the NAFTA years studied by the researchers.
Did those ‘golden era’ manufacturing-job losses increase mortality? If they did so, trade can’t be blamed, as post-war globalization was still in its infancy. But I’ve encountered no evidence that they did so. Either way, the earlier, higher rate of manufacturing-job loss means that the measured post-NAFTA increase in mortality rates identified by the researchers was likely fueled by factors other than trade – factors such as increased welfare payments that discourage people from moving to other towns to find employment, land-use restrictions that do the same, and more occupational-licensing requirements that close off some employment opportunities.
Because trade is not only not a unique, but not even a major, source of job losses – and because job losses are the proximate cause of the increased mortality identified in the research on NAFTA – and because the rate of manufacturing-job losses pre-NAFTA was higher than since NAFTA took effect – and because there is no evident negative effect on mortality of America’s enormous routine rate of job loss – it seems to me to be mistaken to blame that measured rise in mortality on NAFTA.
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030


Indeed, administrative governance is a sort of power that has long been understood to lack legal obligation. It is difficult to understand how laws made without representation, and adjudications made without independent judges and juries, have the obligation of law; instead, they apparently rest merely on government coercion. They therefore cannot be perpetuated on a theory of consent or acquiescence, and they traditionally would have had the potential to justify revolution. Certainly, when the English Crown justified its power as constitutional, the English and eventually the Americans engaged in revolutions against it.
For all its occasionally zany radicalism, libertarianism is not a utopian ideology. More than any other set of political ideas, it recognizes and is based on the limits that economic reality and human nature place on attempts to use the state to accomplish grand goals.
The greatest evils inflicted upon humanity have been the work of those who are so confident of their effort to do good that they do not hesitate to use the instruments of evil available to them on behalf of their righteous cause.

