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Thursday, October 12, 2006

Mexico Needs Reform, Not Mass Emigration

Jeffrey Schmidt in The American Thinker:

Every pair of feet that cross the Rio Grande is a testament to the utter failure of the Mexican government.  It has failed to provide economic opportunity to millions of its people.  And those people are doing what comes naturally to the wretched: migrating to find better lives.  It so happens that the United States, with its freer economy, is a mighty engine of prosperity and a no-brainer lure to the downtrodden.

Of course, the Mexican government is delighted to push this migration and offload its poor on United States.  According to Steve H. Hanke, a Professor of Applied Economics at The Johns Hopkins University, over 27 percent of Mexico’s labor force works in the United States.  These workers are sending home $20 billion in remittances.  This sum equals one third of the total wage earnings in the formal sector of the Mexican economy and 10 percent of Mexico’s exports.

The United States is the proverbial safety valve for a government that has a storied history of incompetence and corruption.  One study, cited by William P. Kucewicz on NRO, estimates that

“corruption, a lack of financial transparency, an inferior legal system and other institutional inadequacies add 5 percent to the cost of doing business with Mexico versus the United States.”

Five percent is no small chunk of change when, collectively, transactions range in the billions of dollars. It is an unaffordable weight upon the economy. Imagine if the money were devoted to business investment or education.

Consider, too, that though privatization efforts began in the 1980s, the government still owns enough of the economy to make a difference, including Petroleos Mexicanos (PEMEX), the nation’s petroleum company, which has been letting its reserves of oil shrink.  Otherwise, it over-regulates and overtaxes the rest.  Politicians and bureaucrats make nice livings running this mess of an economy.  If you’re part of the government, or have strong ties to it, you won’t be splashing across the Rio Grande any time soon. Thanks to the ranks of the unemployed, servants are pretty cheap.

Fat and happy as they may be with the status quo, Mexico’s elites recognize a danger, a danger they’ve been exporting to the United States: millions of poor Mexicans.  Without the United States, the discontented masses are likely to erupt into political action, as was previewed in the recently disputed presidential election.  The contest between the establishment’s Felipe Calderon and leftist Andres Manual Lopez Obrador points to a future where the poor, desperate for change, coalesce behind leftists, given the lack of better alternatives.  After this year’s election, the elite will want more of the poor out of the country.

Should the leftists eventually win a presidential election, their policies will do nothing to improve the lot of the underclass, which is about half the country’s population, other than apply a few band-aids.  An economy that suffers from too much government already will suffer far worse under leftist control.

If the last century taught us anything, it is that statism kills economic growth.  Economies grow when producers keep most of what they earn.  Redistribution of wealth sounds good, but doesn’t mean much when there is little to redistribute.  Cuba is a fine example of this.  And Big Government and corruption go hand-in-hand. Under the left in Mexico, there will be less and less to distribute, aggravated by the anticipated decline of Pemex production.

The trick is to free Mexico’s economy, implement thorough reform of tax and regulation policies and put the government in its proper role of referee and provider of essential services, which includes education and skills training.  Privatize Pemex or at least allow foreign explorataion of Mexico’s oil reserves. And there needs to be a big campaign that sweeps corruption from the halls of government.

For the elite, reforma sounds nice tripping off their tongues, but enacting the systemic reforms that are necessary to free the Mexican economy and clean up government smacks a little too much of revolucion.  And a revolution that breaks the government’s grip on the economy, curtails power and dries up income for politicians and bureaucrats doesn’t make for the Good Life, Mexican style. Not for them.

The only way true reform will happen is if pressure is applied to Mexico’s elites.  That pressure can come in many ways, but one sure way is to keep Mexico’s poor in Mexico.  As long as the United States is Mexico’s safety value, enough pressure may be siphoned off to avert change.

It doesn’t take a genius to figure out why Mexico protests the construction of a fence along its border with the United States.  A fence, along with enhanced technology to monitor the border, and with a beefed up border patrol, means more illegals caught and turned back.  That means the United States isn’t playing nice, isn’t doing its part in helping Mexico’s elites avoid the hard choices and tough policy prescriptions that would mean so much to the nation’s poor.

Getting closer to sealing the border certainly helps the United States in the near term, and it forces Mexico to face its deep-seated problems.  But in the long haul, it is important for the United States that Mexicans want to stay in Mexico.  No border can be sealed entirely, and, over time, the costs of doing so may be burdensome.  And most human beings, equipped with ingenuity, will eventually find ways around obstacles.  Permanently staunching the flow of illegals depends on a free and growing Mexican economy and a largely corruption-free government.

[...]

Call this a variation on the Bush Doctrine.  If terrorism can’t end unless change occurs within societies that foster terrorism, than the same can be said of illegal immigration.

It’s time for Mexico to change.

Read the whole thing.

This makes more sense than anything else I have read on the illegal immigration problem.

Comments

Rob
Rob
17397 comments
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Absolutely spot-on.

The cure for just about all of a given societies’ ills is a free market place and a limited government.  You implement those things and there isn’t a society on earth that can’t thrive.


When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.

-- Thomas Jefferson

Rob’s recently listened-to songs:

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Rob on October 12, 2006 at 06:16 pm

Rob: We’re pretty much on the same page, but I think the beginning of it all is free people.  That is the first step, and is the foundation upon which all the rest is built.


If you don’t know by now, don’t mess with it.

robert108 on October 12, 2006 at 08:10 pm

I read an article a while ago which made the assertion that you have to pay graft everytime you want something done. 

If the cops pull you over you fork over the money to the cop.  I guess that’s not unheard of in the US, but around here it is.

Seems to me that it’d be really hard to fix.


What’s going to happen to US industry when the global warming extremists like John McCain double the price of electricity?  I would think all these factories will close and set up in countries where they aren’t scared of technology.


The Whistler's signature
The Whistler on October 13, 2006 at 03:30 am
Avatar for Anarchist Vegan: Not an Economist

Wonder why Jeffrey Schmidt didn’t mentin that post-NAFTA, a step towards a free-market, the median wage has halved. Maybe another step towards a free-market will cause another halving of the median wage.

When an economy has far more limited capital than labor resources, deregulation always means a drop in wages until wealth (capital) has grown to the point where labor demand increases again. Every country that has tried this has had this result. Why would Mexico buck the trend?

The choice is (arguably) long term gain for a large short term loss, or the status quo. Basically, shit to be Mexico.

AV:  Absolutely clueless.

The government is corrupt so you blame the free market that wasn’t allowed to be.


What’s going to happen to US industry when the global warming extremists like John McCain double the price of electricity?  I would think all these factories will close and set up in countries where they aren’t scared of technology.


The Whistler's signature
The Whistler on October 14, 2006 at 05:24 pm
Avatar for Anarchist Vegan: Not an Economist

The Whistler: What happens with a free market with bugger all capital and a shedload of labor? Low wages of course. This is because without allot of capital, labor isn’t very good good at creating wealth. A weeks work with modern equipment may produce 10 times as much as with very basic old-school equipment (compare peasant farming to modern agriculture if you don’t believe me). So, low revenue (through low volume) means low wages. Eventually, capital will increase, productivity will rise and labor may become more in demand, and maybe the wages will go up. There is a huge pool of third world labor, so this may take awhile in a dergulated global economy.

The government is corrupt, and this will cause inefficiency, but NAFTA took some power out of the governments hands, and the wages dropped. Transition towards a free-market will always do this when capital is sufficiently scarce. Government protectionism tends to inflate wages at the expense of growth, but this only works short-term if all your neighbours are expanding faster.

Anarchist Vegan: Not an Economist drivels, Wonder why Jeffrey Schmidt didn’t mentin that post-NAFTA, a step towards a free-market, the median wage has halved.

The free market can be described on the back of a matchbook. NAFTA was pages upon pages of special allowances and gifts.

Maybe another step towards a free-market will cause another halving of the median wage.

Your premise is wrong and everything so is everything that follows from it.

likwidshoe on October 14, 2006 at 06:46 pm
Avatar for Anarchist Vegan: Not an Economist

Likwidshoe: Why even bother to reply to someone who appears to have even less clue about economic matters than me, I don’t know. But anyways:
The free market can be described on the back of a matchbook.
First, a “free-market” (in the sense you seem to be talking about) relies on private property laws. Try writing them on a matchbook. Second, then there are “intellectual property” laws. Anyone with a clue knows there is no such thing, what they may mean is trademarks, patents, and copyrights. To try to associate these with property is just plain ignorant and dishonest.

Anyway, try reading some of this legislation sometime. It can’t take long since it obviously ”can be described on the back of a matchbook”. A decent chunk of NAFTA therefore was bringing Mexican laws inline with US laws.

AV:  Free markets bring in outside capital.  Get rid of the corruption and money would pour into Mexico.

BTW:  Did you know how many RICH people there are in Mexico?  There isn’t a shortage of wealth there.  There is a shortage of how much people are willing to invest in Mexico.

Mexico also sits on quite a bit of oil.  There’s capital right there ready to be used well.


What’s going to happen to US industry when the global warming extremists like John McCain double the price of electricity?  I would think all these factories will close and set up in countries where they aren’t scared of technology.


The Whistler's signature
The Whistler on October 15, 2006 at 04:08 am

AV: You might have a shred of credibility if you knew what a “free market” is.  Here’s the description:  Free entry, free exit.  That’s it.  It works better with free people, and private property laws, both of which enable it to be more able to generate prosperity, and the better the knowledge and mobility of the participants, the better it works, but the only requisites are the ones I described above.


If you don’t know by now, don’t mess with it.

robert108 on October 15, 2006 at 07:57 am
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