This is from Rabble.
http://www.rabble.ca/columnists_full.shtml?x=68482
Some of the job losses may be an effect of
globalisation and competition from outside North
America rather than NAFTA.

Cheers, Ken Hanly

Please don't throw us outta the NAFTA patch
>by Rick Salutin 
March 7, 2008 
What's with the NAFTA panic attacks some Canadians are
having? They can't really believe the Americans would
pull out of their big trade deal with us and Mexico.
Maybe it's strategy on their part, like that trickster
Brer Rabbit. Brer Fox traps Brer Rabbit and is
carrying him to the cook pot. "Do anything to me,"
pleads the rabbit, "but don't throw me into the briar
patch." So the fox does. But don't throw us out of the
NAFTA patch. Right. If only.

Can anyone honestly think little Mexico and puny
Canada fooled the mighty, rich, ruthless U.S. into
doing something it didn't understand? It was their
idea to start with! Then they got Brian Mulroney's
government and the CEOs of U.S. branch companies here
to push it through. What did they gain?

How about 63 per cent of our oil, 56 per cent of our
natural gas, and our powerlessness to cut back on
those amounts even if every Canadian is freezing to
death? What were we supposed to get? "Guaranteed
access" to the U.S. market based on a "dispute
settlement mechanism." Only there never was a dispute
settlement mechanism. Just an Alice-in-Wonderland
clause where each country gets to decide if it's
applying its own laws properly when there's a
complaint. Et voilà, softwood lumber.

Then why are there threats and gripes in the U.S.?
Because it hasn't been good for everyone. An Ohio
union leader told journalist JoAnn Wypijewski, "Who
said there was going to be a giant sucking sound? They
made a fool of him, but he was absolutely right." He
means Ross Perot, in 1992, predicting the jobs effect
of NAFTA if it went through. He said U.S. industrial
jobs would move to places with lower wages and
desperate people — like Mexico. But hey, Ohio, don't
blame us. The sucking sound starts up here, passes
through the U.S. to Mexico, then to even grimmer spots
beyond.

Whole plants in Southern Ontario shipped themselves to
the southern U.S. Take Nortel, once Canada's poster
child for the superior employment that trade deals
such as NAFTA would bring. It chugged public funding,
then under the trade deals began shedding jobs — from
more than 85,000, mostly Canadian, to about 30,000.
Its Canadian work force is down to 6,800. This week,
it said it would cut more North American jobs while
adding them in China, India, Mexico and other
"lower-cost regions." Flush.

So was NAFTA a bad deal? Yes. Was it a good deal? Yes.
What's going on? It's all about who it's good for and
who it's bad for. For this, you need to think a bit in
terms of social class, which got harder when John
Edwards dropped out of the Democratic race. He talked
about those things.

Take Canada. According to economist Bruce Campbell,
under NAFTA, the Big Three auto makers shrank their
work force here by more than 50 per cent and increased
revenues by 70 per cent. Employment declined in
manufacturing and rose in the lower-paid service
sector. Wages haven't grown at all since the original
free-trade deal in 1988. That's a first.

Productivity has continued to rise, but, in the past,
wages always rose "in tandem." Top CEOs in 2005 made
237 times more than the average wage, doubling the gap
before NAFTA. Wages as a portion of the economic pie
declined while profits rose. The top 0.1 per cent of
earners doubled their income to $1,641,000; the bottom
95 per cent saw their share of the pie decline.

As for public goods, such as health care and
education, we were told these would thrive under trade
deals; but our governments have slashed social
programs by 26 per cent. Oh, please don't toss us
outta the NAFTA patch.

It's not just here. In the U.S., six out of 10
Republican voters say free trade did harm. Mexicans
disapprove of NAFTA 2 to 1, the reverse of 10 years
ago, before real experience set in. But we only hear
about it from our leaders when an election is on:
Chrétien-Martin in 1993, the Democrats now. When it's
over — nothing. Try your class analysis on that
phenomenon. 

Originally published in The Globe and Mail, Rick
Salutin's column appears every Friday.


Blog:  http://kenthink7.blogspot.com/index.html
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