Matt Slaughter served in the George W. Bush administration. Rather, they argue
that the huge benefits for the U.S. economy as a whole are being put at risk by
the fact that too many Americans aren’t seeing their paychecks get bigger.
Scheve and Slaughter explain:
[U.S.] policy is becoming more protectionist because the public is
becoming more protectionist, and
the public is becoming more
protectionist because incomes are stagnating or falling. The integration
of the world economy has boosted productivity and wealth creation in
the United States and much of the rest of the world. But within many
countries, and certainly within the United States,
the benefits of this
integration have been unevenly distributed—and this fact is
increasingly being recognized. Individuals are asking themselves, “Is
globalization good for me?” and, in a growing number of cases,
arriving at the conclusion that it is not.
The authors propose “a New Deal for globalization—one that links
engagement with the world economy to a substantial redistribution of income.”
Remember, this isn’t hippy talk. These are the capitalists
who see angry workers
with pitchforks loitering outside the gates of a very profitable factory, and they
are making a very pragmatic calculation: Throw these people some food (and
maybe some movie tickets and beer) before we all end up worse off.
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