Worried About a Recession? Don't Blame Free Trade
by Daniel Griswold
June 3, 2008
Speculation is growing that the U.S. economy may have
already slipped into recession. If the past is any guide, politicians on the
campaign trail will be tempted to blame trade and globalization for the passing
pain of the business cycle. But an analysis of previous recessions and
expansions shows that international trade and investment are not to blame for
downturns in the economy and may, in fact, be moderating the business cycle.
In recent decades, as foreign trade and investment have been rising as a share
of the U.S. economy, recessions have actually become milder and less frequent.
The softening of the business cycle has become so striking that economists now
refer to it as “The Great Moderation.” The more benign trend appears to date
from the mid-1980s.
The Great Moderation means that Americans are spending more of their time
earning a living in a growing economy and less in a contracting economy. Our
economy has been in recession a total of 16 months in the past 25 years, or 5.3
percent of the time. In comparison, between 1945 and 1983, the nation suffered
through nine recessions totaling 96 months, or 21.1 percent of that time period.
America’s recent experience of a more globalized and less volatile economy has
not been unique in the world. Other countries that have opened themselves to
global markets have been less vulnerable to financial and economic shocks.
Countries that put all their economic eggs in the domestic basket lack the
diversification that a more globally integrated economy can fall back on to
weather a slowdown. A country that increases trade as a share of its gross
domestic product by 10 percentage points is actually about one-third less
likely to suffer sudden economic slowdowns or other crises than if it were less
open to trade. As the authors of this study concluded:
Some may find this counterintuitive: trade protectionism does not “shield”
countries from the volatility of world markets as proponents might hope. On the
contrary...economies that trade less with other countries are more prone to
sudden stops and to currency crises.
Globalization is not the only possible cause behind the moderation of the
business cycle. Improved monetary policy, fewer external shocks (what some
economists call “good luck”), and other structural changes in the economy may
have all played a role. For example, the decline in unionization and the
resulting increase in labor-market flexibility have allowed wages and
employment patterns to adjust more readily to changing market conditions,
mitigating spikes in unemployment. Better inventory management through
just-in-time delivery has reduced the cyclical overhangs that can disrupt
production.
Combined with those other factors, expanding trade and globalization have
helped to moderate swings in national output by blessing us with a more
diversified and flexible economy. Exports can take up slack when domestic
demand sags, and imports can satisfy demand when domestic productive capacity
is reaching its short-term limits. Access to foreign capital markets can allow
domestic producers and consumers alike to more easily borrow to tide themselves
over during difficult times.
A weakening dollar has helped to boost exports and earnings abroad, but the
main driver of success overseas has been strong growth and lower trade barriers
outside the United States. American companies have been earning a larger and
larger share of their profits overseas for decades now. According to economist
Ed Yardeni, the share of profits that U.S. companies earn abroad has increased
steadily from about 5 percent in the 1960s to about a quarter of all profits
today.
If the U.S. economy does tip into recession this year, free trade and
globalization will be among the likely scapegoats. The pain of recession will
be real for millions of American households, but raising barriers to foreign
trade and investment will provide no relief for most affected workers. In fact,
reverting to protectionism would only reduce the capacity of our economy to
regain its footing and resume its long-term pattern of growth.
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Daniel Griswold is director for the Center for Trade Policy Studies at Cato
Institute.
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