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COOKEVILLE, Tenn. (Sept. 12, 2007) — Free market reforms affecting
traded goods, capital and labor markets in Mexico and Venezuela have done
more to hurt than to help most workers and their families in those countries.
That’s the conclusion of Jon Jonakin, a Tennessee Tech University
economics professor, who was awarded a non-instructional research grant
from the university and spent spring semester 2007 studying how the two
countries’ economies have responded to orthodox liberalization policies
that were implemented there in the 1980s and 90s.
His findings are outlined in a paper titled “Labor and Its Discontents:
The Consequences of Orthodox Reform in Venezuela and Mexico.”
“The positive results projected by many orthodox economists just
aren’t there,” Jonakin said.
Instead of experiencing falling income inequality, greater job creation
and increased wages for the relatively abundant less-skilled workers —
as many orthodox economists projected prior to the reforms — just
the opposite has often happened in both countries.
“Both countries have instead experienced increases in precarious
informal work that guarantees no employment benefits, falling real wages
for less-skilled workers, rising income inequality, higher unemployment
and — in the case of Mexico — emigration,” he said.
He estimates that Mexico’s manufactured exports rose from 4.3 percent
in 1990 to 21.5 percent by 1995, while at the same time, the number of
manufacturing workers declined by about 1 percent each year.
By 2005, more than 11 million Mexicans — about 6.2 million unauthorized
— lived in this country. That means, at a minimum, 12 percent of
Mexico’s labor force resides in the United States, Jonakin estimates.
In terms of net earnings of foreign exchange, “the most effective
export Mexico produced — or rather induced — under the orthodox
market reforms was the labor effort of its undocumented emigrant workforce,”
he said.
The reason is that greater foreign direct investment flows initially
expanded the ‘maquila’ industries and generated immediate
jobs — but few upstream linkages to intermediate goods production,
Jonakin said.
A ‘maquiladora’ is a factory that imports materials and equipment
on a duty-free or tariff-free basis for assembly or manufacturing then
re-exports the assembled product, usually back to the originating country,
he explained.
A flood of Chinese manufactured imports forced many of Mexico’s
domestic manufacturing firms to close, and “in spite of exponential
increases in manufactured exports in Mexico, the trade balance remained
negative and manufacturing employment fell,” Jonakin said.
In Venezuela, petroleum extraction is a capital-intensive industry requiring
skilled labor — but it’s not an industry with job growth potential.
“In 1997, when extractive and mining activities accounted for more
than 23 percent of Venezuela’s gross domestic product, only 1 percent
of the country’s labor force was employed there, and that share
remained largely unchanged from 1989 to 1999,” Jonakin said.
As in Mexico, much FDI was used in Venezuela to purchase private —
and especially state-owned — firms in the service sector.
In the case of telecommunications, airlines and port operations firms,
the work forces were offered forced buy-outs or were summarily dismissed,
Jonakin said, often before potential private sector buyers were approached.
Large drops in employment followed the privatization of these firms,
and many workers who were rehired became classified as ‘temporary’
workers.
In Venezuela, “the rate of poverty rose from 44 percent in 1988
to 66.5 percent in 1989, and curiously worsened in the mid- to late-1990s,
even during periods of growth,” Jonakin said.
“It was in large part due to the failures of free market reforms
and their negative impact on people’s lives that Hugo Chavez was
elected president of Venezuela in 1998,” he continued. “He
subsequently began to reverse many of the earlier policies.”
Jonakin concludes that the patterns revealed in Mexico and Venezuela
are representative of the negative impacts that free market reforms have
had elsewhere in Latin America.
--Tracey Hackett
This information posted 25 September 2007
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