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Date: | Fri Mar 31 17:18:44 2006 |
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I would like to make a comment about the argument presented in Michael
Lusztig's, _The Limits of Protectionism_ that was recently reviewed by
Anthony Patrick O'Brien.
[http://eh.net/pipermail/hes/2004-December/002741.html]
I write because the argument in Lustig's book appears necessarily
convoluted. There appear to be serious difficulties with the argument
presented, difficulties that were not addressed by O'Brien.
Lustig begins with an apparent dichotomy, if legislators are held
captive by special interests, why have legal changes in recent decades
generally supported free trade, which apparently would hurt those
special interest groups?
To quote O'Brien, "In Lustzig's view legislators are corrupt, their
votes for sale to the highest bidder, and so tend to favor protection.
On the other hand, heads of government -- presidents and prime ministers
-- favor liberalizing trade because they are either beneficent social
planners or because they reap the political benefits of the more
efficient economies that result from free trade."
It seems this argument requires two distinct pools of politicians, those
who run for offices in legislature and those that run for heads of
government.
Does this seem even remotely plausible? There would need to be one bad
group of politicians and another good group of politicians. The division
between bad and good politicians would also need to be synchronized with
the division of politicians into those who favor protectionism vs. those
who favor freer trade.
Good politicians would always be selfless and support free trade. Bad
politicians would always be captive of special interests and support
protectionism.
If you want to accept the public choice argument, wouldn't the logical
conclusion be that the politician's votes are bought by the most
powerful and wealthy interests, and that those interests on balance
favor globalization? While some businesses or interest groups may favor
protectionism, they are not as influential and powerful as those who
favor new trading rules? Thus, the politicians that run for and gain
the highest offices are merely being paid by the most powerful interest
groups.
While the implications are much less pleasant for proponents of new
trade rules, this at least seems to be an easier way of resolving the
dichotomy presented by Lusztigs.
Eric Hake
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