Robert Reich: Why Trump’s “America First” Plan Is Pure Fantasy
When Donald Trump gave a speech at Boeing’s factory in North Charleston, South Carolina—unveiling Boeing’s new 787 Dreamliner—he congratulated Boeing for building the plane “right here” in South Carolina. It’s pure fantasy. I’ll let you know why in a moment.
Trump seems utterly ignorant about global competition.
Trump also used the occasion to tout his “America First” economics, stating “our goal as a nation must be to rely less on imports and more on products made here in the U.S.A.” and “we want products made by our workers in our factories stamped by those four magnificent words: made in the U.S.A.”
To achieve this goal, Trump would impose “a very substantial penalty” on companies that fired their workers and moved to other countries to make a product and then tried to sell it back to America. The carrot would be lower taxes and fewer regulations.
Trump seems utterly ignorant about global competition—and about what’s really holding back American workers.
Start with Boeing’s Dreamliner. It’s not “made in the U.S.A.” It’s assembled in the United States. But most of its parts come from overseas. Those foreign parts total of the cost of the entire plane.
For example:
The Italian firm Alenia Aeronautica makes the center fuselage and horizontal stabilizers.
The French firm Messier-Dowty makes the aircraft’s landing gears and doors.
The German firm Diehl Luftfahrt Elektronik supplies the main cabin lighting.
The Swedish firm Saab Aerostructures makes the cargo access doors.
The Japanese company Jamco makes parts for the lavatories, flight deck interiors, and galleys.
The French firm Thales makes its electrical power conversion system.
Thales selected GS Yuasa, a Japanese firm, in 2005 to supply it with the system’s lithium-ion batteries.
The British company Rolls Royce makes many of the engines.
A Canadian firm makes the moveable trailing edge of the wings.
Notably, these companies don’t pay their workers low wages. In fact, when you add in the value of health and pension benefits—either directly from these companies to their workers or in the form of public benefits to which the companies contribute—most of these foreign workers get a better deal than do Boeing’s workers. (The average wage for Boeing production and maintenance workers in South Carolina is ) They also get more paid vacation days.
These nations also provide most young people with and technical training. They continually upgrade the skills of their workers. And they offer .
The way to make the American workforce more competitive isn’t to put economic walls around America.
To pay for all this, these countries also impose higher tax rates on their corporations and wealthy individuals than does the United States. And their health, safety, environmental, and labor regulations are stricter. Not incidentally, they have .
So why is so much of Boeing’s Dreamliner coming from these high-wage, high-tax, high-cost places? Because the parts made by workers in these countries are better, last longer, and are more reliable than parts made anywhere else.
There’s a lesson here.
The way to make the American workforce more competitive isn’t to put economic walls around America. It’s to invest more and invest better in the education and skills of Americans, in on-the-job training, in a health care system that reaches more of us and ensures we stay healthy. And to give workers a say in their companies through strong unions.
In other words, we get a first-class workforce by investing in the productive capacities of Americans—and rewarding them with high wages. It’s the exact opposite of what Trump is proposing.
By the way, the first delivery of the Dreamliner is scheduled to take place next year—to Singapore Airlines. Current orders for it include Air France, British Airways, and Mexico’s flag carrier, Aeromexico. Boeing is also buying as much as $1 trillion worth of its commercial airplanes over the next two decades, including wide-body jets like the 787 Dreamliner. China already accounts for a fifth of Boeing’s sales.
But if Trump succeeds in putting an economic wall around America, these other nations’ airlines may have second thoughts about buying from Boeing. They might choose airplanes from countries more open to their own exports—say, Europe’s Airbus.
Trump’s “America First” economics is pure demagoguery. Xenophobic grandstanding doesn’t boost the competitiveness of American workers. Nor does it boost American-based companies.
At most, it boosts Trump.
This article was originally published at . It has been edited for Ӱҵ Magazine.
Robert Reich
is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing Economies. He is a former United States Secretary of Labor, the co-founder of Inequality Media, and a founding editor of The American Prospect.
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