century later, that mill closed, in part because of growing foreign competition.
It’s not pretty:
Since October—after a last-ditch effort to save the mill fell
through—Newton Falls has edged closer to becoming a case study of
doleful rural sociology: a dying town, where the few people left give
mournful testament to having their
community wind down like an
untended clock, ticking inexorably toward a final tock.
6
Yes, the economic gains from trade outweigh the losses, but the winners
rarely write checks to the losers. And the losers often lose badly. What
consolation is it to a Maine shoe worker that trade with Vietnam will make the
country as a whole richer?
He’s poorer and probably always will be. I’ve gotten
those e-mails, too.
Indeed, we’re back to the same discussion about capitalism that we had at the
beginning of the book and again in Chapter 8.
Markets create a new, more
efficient order by destroying the old one. There is nothing pleasant about that,
Dostları ilə paylaş: