reducing the living standards of the participants, greatly
improves them. And the country with the freest trade policy
enjoys the maximum advantage.</p>
<p>I repeat: trade raises wages! Those who think otherwise fail
to understand that wages in the U.S. are the world's highest
for a reason: <enttype='NORP'>American</ent> industry has the world's highest
average-capital investment per worker ($125000) and,
therefore, has the highest average productivity per worker.
And while we have high wages, because of the multiplier--
tools, we also have low labor costs!</p>
<p>Certainly, labor-intensive industries, i.e., textiles, find it
difficult to compete inside a capital-intensive country.
After all, a <enttype='NORP'>Chinese</ent> worker with minimal capital--a needle--
and working for $20 a week, will produce handmade lace at a
lower cost than an <enttype='NORP'>American</ent> worker using the same needle and
receiving $200 a week. While their productivity will be the
same, the <enttype='NORP'>Chinese</ent> labor cost will be one-tenth of the U.S.
cost.</p>
<p>But give the <enttype='NORP'>American</ent> worker a giant mechanical shovel and, at
the world's highest wage, he will produce the world's cheapest
coal. With advanced technology, workers will produce the
lowest-cost coal, wheat, jet aircraft and countless other
goods. And so, we import lace and ball gloves and petroleum,
and we export jet planes and wheat and chemicals. To attempt
to "retaliate" against lower costs in certain foreign
industries is an exercise in folly.</p>
<p>Moreover, contrary to popular belief, imports don't cause
unemployment, nor do immigration or automation. Unemployment
exists only when money wages are arbitrarily raised or held
above the market price.</p>
<p><enttype='EVENT'>The Great Depression</ent> is the classic case of "iatrogenic"
unemployment, i.e., induced by the economic doctor. For
example, when the stock market crashed in 1929, it
precipitated a deflation and concomitant lowering of all
prices. Presidents <enttype='PERSON'>Hoover</ent> and <enttype='PERSON'>Roosevelt</ent>, believing in the so-called "purchasing power theory," cooperated with major
industrialists and union leaders to do everything in their
power to prevent wages from falling--even though prices in
general had dropped by one-third from 1929 to 1932! The result
was that twenty-five to thirty percent of the work force was
unemployed. The situation was not ameliorated until 1941 when
the government printed massive amounts of money to support the
war effort; and instead of trying to support wages, the
government took the opposite position and introduced controls
to hold wages down. Unemployment soon disappeared and industry
expanded.</p>
<p>Unfortunately, a false lesson was learned--that war is the