The case for keeping people poor because it’s good for the planet is
economically and morally bankrupt.
Poverty is a bitch. The principal of a high school near Chicago’s
Robert Taylor
housing projects once told me that when I was writing a story on urban
education. He was talking about the challenges of teaching kids who had grown
up poor and deprived. He might as well have been talking about the state of the
world. Many parts of the world—places we rarely think about, let alone visit—
are desperately poor. We ought to make them richer; economics tells us that
trade is an important way to do it. Paul Krugman has nicely summarized the
anxiety over globalization with an old French saying: Anyone who is not a
socialist before
he is thirty has no heart; anyone who is still a socialist after he is
thirty has no head. He writes:
If you buy a product made in a third-world country, it was
produced by workers who are paid incredibly little by Western
standards and probably work under awful conditions. Anyone who is
not bothered by those facts, at least some of the time, has no heart. But
that doesn’t mean the demonstrators are right.
On the contrary, anyone
who thinks that the answer to world poverty is simple outrage against
global trade has no head—or chooses not to use it. The
antiglobalization movement already has a remarkable track record of
hurting the very people and causes it claims to champion.
22
The trend toward more global trade is often described as an unstoppable force. It
is not. We’ve been down this road before, only to have the world trading system
torn apart by war and politics. One of the most rapid periods of globalization
took place during the end of the nineteenth century and the beginning of the
twentieth. John Micklethwait
and Adrian Wooldridge, authors of
A Future
Perfect, have noted, “Look back 100 years and you discover a world that by
many economic measures was more global than it is today: where you could
travel without a passport, where the gold standard was an international currency,
and where technology (cars, trains, ships, and telephones) was making the world
enormously smaller.” Alas,
they point out, “That grand illusion was shot to
pieces on the playing fields of the Somme.”
23
Political boundaries still matter. Governments can slam the door on
globalization, as they have before. That would be a shame for rich countries and
poor countries alike.