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INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS, ECO 486 • NAFTA • Int’l Factor Mobility – DFI – Migration 1 2 Learning Objectives • Discuss Chapter 10 & Chapter 10 Homework • Review the NAFTA Report • Review Chapter 9, International Mobility of Productive Factors, from Kreinin’s International Economics • Explain the effects of immigration on the wages of immigrants and native Americans 5 Aggregate Effects of NAFTA • NAFTA took effect January 1, 1994 – After three year, most tariff provisions in place – Reductions in NTBs continue – Most “rulemaking” obligations are in force • ITC found no effects on – US GDP – US growth rates • limited time period • relative size of US economy 6 Aggregate Effects of NAFTA • US Imports from Mexico have increased +1% in 1994 +5.7% in 1995 +6.4% in 1996 • US Exports to Mexico have increased +1.3% in 1994 +3.8% in 1995 +3.24% in 1996 • No significant effects on trade with Canada 7 Industry trade • Studied 200 industries accounting for >85% of US trade with its NAFTA partners • Several industries show increased trade • A few industries show decreased trade • See Table ES-2 8 Table ES-2: Industry trade Number of Industries US Exports -- Mexico US Imports -- Mexico US Exports -- Canada US Imports -- Canada Sig. Sig. Increase Decrease 10 0 Not Sig. Affected 78 16 7 92 10 8 95 13 8 94 9 Labor • No effects on agg. employment or earnings • 29 of 120 manufacturing industries showed some change in hourly earnings or hours worked. – Found seven industries where lower import prices may cause job losses – Found four industries where lower import prices may increase US employment • complements or productivity effects 10 Productivity • Lacked data for direct analysis • US productivity gains – Where strong competition from imports 11 Qualitative Analysis • For 59 of 68 industry sectors, NAFTA had a negligible effect • Nine exceptions: – grain and oilseed – raw cotton – textile mill products – – – – – – apparel women’s footwear appliances vehicles vehicle parts leather • Services -- only financial services 13 Scope of DFI • DFI -- Direct Foreign Investment – investments that give company headquarters control over the foreign subsidiary • MNC -- Multi-National Corporations – – – – 40,000 parent firms 250,000 foreign affiliates Global sales = $5.2 trillion in 1992 Stock of DFI = $2.6 trillion 1995 15 Motives for DFI • Profit expectations (Profit = Revenue -Costs) • Revenue – DFI may improve access to foreign markets – Differing growth rates • Rapid US growth ‘83-’89 attracted DFI – Marketing considerations 16 Motives for DFI • Cost reduction through DFI – Obtain raw materials • unavailable or expensive at home • complementary to home resources • may raise productivity of home’s K & L – Lower labor costs – Lower transportation costs • perishable products & • products with low value to weight ratio 17 Motives for DFI • Cost reduction through DFI – Special tax treatment • US foreign tax credit • Transfer pricing to avoid taxes – Avoid tariffs and NTBs – When a large company moves abroad, its suppliers may follow – US anti-trust laws may block a merger at home, encouraging merger with foreign companies 18 Does DFI Substitute for Trade? • 1996 WTO report found no support for a negative relationship between a country’s DFI and its exports 19 DFI and World Welfare • Free movement of resources benefits the world economy • DFI (K) is attracted by higher profits – K flows from where it is abundant to where it is scarce – MPPK in source < MPPK host country – Flows cease once returns are equalized – World output increases 20 Host Country’s Welfare • New capital boosts output • DFI brings other benefits – – – – Managerial skill Technology Often trains its labor force Income, savings, and growth rate increase 21 Host Countries Resent DFI • Monopolistic exploitation of natural resources – exaggerated fears, but a possibility – producing countries could form a cartel • Most desirable jobs remain in source country (myth?) • Resentment has led to restrictions – performance standards 22 Source Country’s Welfare • Excessive DFI harms the source country (US) – Returns to capital increase, but – Firms may ignore important risks • e.g., confiscation – Revenue loss to US government – Productivity in US of labor & land may suffer – Offset: DFI in extractive industries complements US factors 23 Conclusion • Unobstructed international capital flows enhance world welfare 24 Combining Traditional Trade Theories & MNCs • Traditional Trade Theories – assume factors are immobile • Commodity Composition of Trade – Can it still be explained? 25 Combining Traditional Trade Theories & MNCs • Assume a MNC employs four factors – two immobile (skilled & unskilled labor) – two mobile (capital& knowledge) • Returns to mobile factors equalized • Immobile factors – Abundance varies across countries – Intensity varies across industries • Labor skills more important than K/L ratio 26 Combining Traditional Trade Theories & MNCs • Predictions: – Mobile factors attracted to countries with better infrastructure – Transport costs and trade barriers induce the MNC to locate near its markets – IRS limit number of production facilities – Large markets confer a CA on home producers in industries with IRS • Familiar results 27 International Migration of Labor • Consequences parallel those of capital flows • Loss to source country is less than gain to host country • Labor in the host country loses, but labor in the source country gains • “Brain drain” – Compensation? 29 Immigration • Sixty million people have migrated from their country of birth – 1.2% of world’s current population • Almost 1/3 of them now live in the US – ~800,000 legal immigrants per year recently – Significant portion of US population growth Immigration 30 31 US Immigration • Once mainly European – Directly – Indirectly • Mexico – > ¼ of legal immigrants – + 200,000 to 300,000 others Immigration 32 33 Immigration • Scale, Origin, and Skills of U.S. Immigrants – The skills of immigrants vary considerably – On average, immigrants are less productive than native Americans – During the 1960’s, new immigrants earned 17% less than comparable Americans — 1970’s – 28% less — 1980’s – 32% less 34 Immigration • Immigrants and the Labor Market – Immigration increases the supply of labor • Lowers the wage rates of (low-skilled) US workers – Decreases the supply of labor in the source country • This raises their country’s wage rates • Let’s see what would happen with free movement of immigrants Wage rate (dollars per hour) Wage rate (dollars per hour) Factor Price Equalization 25 20 15 25 20 15 10 10 8 8 5 5 LDUS 0 75 100 125 150 175 Quantity of labor (millions) 35 LDM 1 0 25 50 75 100 125 Quantity of labor (millions) 37 …Doesn’t Necessarily Occur • Actual effects appear to be small – Restrictions slow immigration – Immigration also increases the demand for labor • Immigrants purchase goods & services • Substitute for native low-skill labor • Complement capital & high-skilled labor – Indeterminate result 38 Immigration • How Do New Immigrants Perform in the United States? – As a rule, immigrants’ earnings grow more rapidly than the earnings of native Americans. – However, they still do not catch up. 39 Immigration • Immigrants and the Government Budget – In 1970, 6% of all native households and 5.9% of immigrant households received some form of welfare – By 1990, the percentages were 7.4% for native households and 9.1% for immigrant households – Rate of return on social security contributions higher for immigrants 42 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • Globalization made MNCs more “footloose” than ever. • Partly true 43 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • MNCs are, first and foremost, creatures of their home countries. • Not always 44 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • All MNCs are large corporations. • False 45 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • Markets dominated by MNCs are impenetrable to rival companies. • False 46 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • Only some industries are going global. • False 47 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • MNCs are bigger than their assets. • True 48 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • MNCs are inherently exploitative. • Yes and no… 49 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • Investments by MNCs are good, investments by international money managers are bad. • Not necessarily 50 Multi-National Corporations True or False? • MNCs are creations of wealthy countries. • Not anymore 53 WTO News Items • “Millennium Round” Agenda? • NTBs (e.g. apples) • Activists concerned about – Environment – Workers’ rights – Human rights • Comments 54 WTO Enforcement Actions • Over 100 • Only three involve environmental issues – Tuna – Turtles – What was the third? • Environmental restrictions were discriminatory – Revised to be non-discriminatory • Greens concerned about NTBs 55 Tony Auth, NY Times editorial cartoon, December 2, 1999 56 Arizona Republic, Sunday editorial cartoon, December 1995 57