Lou Dobbs on outsourcing/offshoring

Accused of fanning the flames of protectionism contrary to our economic interest in free trade, CNN’s Lou Dobbs defends himself in:“Exporting America: false choices”

You may have noticed recently that I’m being attacked for my views on the exporting of American jobs and my calls for a balanced U.S. trade policy [citing articles in the Financial Times, the Economist, Wall Street Journal, and Washington Post ]. . . .

I will tell you it does make a fellow think when attacked so energetically and so personally. But in none of the attacks on my position on outsourcing has a single columnist or news organization seen fit to deal with the facts.

Number one: We’re not creating jobs in the private sector, and that’s never happened before in our history. Our economists and politicians need to be coming up with answers, not dogma.

Number two: We haven’t had a trade surplus in this country in more than two decades, and our trade deficit continues to soar.

Number three: We’ve lost three million jobs in this country over the last three years, and millions more American jobs are at risk of being outsourced to cheap overseas labor markets.

That seems to me, at least, to be more than sufficient evidence for all of us, Republicans and Democrats alike, to question critically the policies of both parties that have led us to this critical juncture in our economy and our history. . . .

Frankly, I would love to be proved wrong in my views, and I would gladly change my position, if only my critics would answer a few questions factually, empirically and straightforwardly.

One: How many more jobs must we lose before they become concerned about our middle class and our strength as a consumer market? Two: When will the U.S. have to quit borrowing foreign capital to buy foreign goods that support European and Asian economies while driving us deeper into debt? Three: What jobs will our currently 15 million unemployed workers fill, where and when? . . .

Our principal trading partners, Canada, China, Japan and the European Union, all typically maintain annual trade surpluses and pursue balanced trade. Why don’t my critics call them protectionists? Why not call them economic isolationists?

My critics, and proponents of the status quo, are offering false choices. They say we must decide between protectionism, or economic isolationism as the president said today, and free trade. I’m sure they believe those choices are the only ones available.

But maybe they also fear our policymakers may discover a middle ground for a desperately needed new U.S. trade policy: a balanced trade policy in the national interest.

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