Posts Tagged ‘Protectionism’

Protectionism On The Rise, Be Afraid!

March 28, 2009

Update: March28, 2009

Protesters, police go online in G-20 battle

By CNN’s Simon Hooper

LONDON, England (CNN) — Social networking Web sites are set to play a crucial role in protests ahead of next week’s G-20 meeting of world leaders in London as demonstration organizers and police use Twitter and Facebook as key sources of real-time information and intelligence.

Metropolitan Police leaders have warned that the city faces an “unprecedented” wave of protest in the run-up to Thursday’s summit talks on the state of the global economy and are set to deploy huge numbers of officers to maintain public order.
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March 27, 2009

As I have said on many occasions I am not an economist just a simple man on the street guided by intuition, common sense and history.
In the past couple of weeks I have been seeing a move by many countries that bodes ill for all. I speak of protectionism. Day by day more and more economist are beginning to sound the alarm and express concern of this latest trend away from free trade.

After they met in Washington last November, G20 leaders said that they had united to support open markets.
From The Economist print edition

Well, talk about a bunch of crap! It seems they did a lot of talk about open markets but no sooner the meeting was over they started measures towards protectionism. They should heed the lessons of history.

COMPARISONS to the Depression feature in almost every discussion of the global economic crisis. In world trade, such parallels are especially chilling. Trade declined alarmingly in the early 1930s as global demand imploded, prices collapsed and governments embarked on a destructive, protectionist spiral of higher tariffs and retaliation.
From The Economist print edition

Many economist are warning about this move towards protectionism but the question is will the G20 members heed their warnings?


UNLESS January was a strangely synchronised blip, trade is collapsing much more rapidly than people had realised before (see our Leader). The World Bank has very helpfully been putting together data for as many countries as release their data, and the January data look pretty scary indeed.
The Economist
As I have said I am not an economist but it would seem that more and more of them are taking my view of where this is all heading namely another Economic Depression and this one will more than likely be more devastating than the last. The G20 would do well to take the advice of the experts and beware of closing borders to free trade. History has shown that once that happens war is right around the corner!

Protectionism! Yes or No?

March 27, 2009

Our economy and that of the rest of the world might be in for a jolt if the G20 have their way.  Here is an excerpt from an article by Annys Shin in the Washington Post:

At their last meeting in November, the leaders of 20 industrialized and developing nations pledged to fight anti-trade policies. But a World Bank report released last week found that of the G20 members, 17 have failed to keep that promise, prompting calls by world leaders and others for the group to adopt a tougher stance this time.

Here are two points that should be considered by those countries before going down the protectionist path.

  1. In the 1930s, the US adopted the protectionist Hawley-Smoot Tariff Act     which raised rates to all-time highs beyond the Lincoln levels , which some economists believe exacerbated the Great Depression.
  2. Protectionism has also been accused of being one of the major causes of war. According to Frederic Bastiat, “When goods cannot cross borders, armies will.”

I think that many of the G20 members would benefit by re-examining Bastiat’s Economic Sophisms in particularly Bastiat’s theoretical railway between Spain and France. Even though he lived during the 1800’s his clarity is something that is much needed in our current world economic crisis.

“When goods cannot cross borders, armies will, ” is a prelude to what may come to be should the protectionist stance be incorporated by the G20 members. In thinking that they will protect their country’s goods they will in fact be hurting their country’s producers.

Source: Wikipedia: Protectionism / Frederic Bastiat

World Bank report reveals booming protectionism

March 23, 2009

Well, here is another one that I was just waiting for. I figured they would go back on their word but I didn’t expect it to be so soon and so public. Guess what? The good old United States is included in the membership!!!

Mark Peart | Monday March 23 2009 – 07:57am

The G20 group of industrialised nations’ credibility is in tatters just five months after it pledged to end protectionism in response to the global financial crisis.
A just-released World Bank report has found that 17 members of the 20-member group have embarked on protectionist measures in one form or another since they signed a pledge on November 15 not to go down that path.

Citigroup secures U.S. government lifeline

November 24, 2008

Well, it seems that the government is throwing out yet another lifeline this time to Citigroup. I begin to wonder how long this will continue before the Government needs a Bailout? Now 21 nations are pledging not to implement Protectionism measures, at least not for the next 12 months.

Protectionism is the economic policy of restraining trade between nations, through methods such as tariffs on imported goods, restrictive quotas, and a variety of other restrictive government regulations designed to discourage imports, and prevent foreign take-over of local markets and companies. This policy is closely aligned with anti-globalization, and contrasts with free trade, where government barriers to trade are kept to a minimum. The term is mostly used in the context of economics, where protectionism refers to policies or doctrines which “protect” businesses and “living wages” within a country by restricting or regulating trade between foreign nations.

Source: Wikipedia

The U.S. seems to be scared that other nations were already planning on this measure which, if implemented could have restricted U.S. exports.  It makes me wonder who in their right mind would want to buy for instance an American made, gas guzzling SUV?

Well, you can check out the latest below and one or two extra pieces that I felt should be here.

Citigroup secures U.S. government lifeline

NEW YORK (CNN) — The U.S. government outlined a massive rescue package for Citigroup early Monday that would inject another $20 billion into the banking giant, shares of which have plunged in the past week.
The additional $20 billion follows a $25 billion injection into Citigroup earlier this year as part of the $700 billion bank bailout Congress passed in October. And the U.S. Treasury and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. will backstop some losses against more than $300 billion in troubled assets.

The hard times are not only in the U.S. Here is a look at New Zealand

Hard times give rise to the ‘nouveaux pauvres’

4:00AM Monday Nov 24, 2008
By Catherine Field

France used to complain about the tackiness of its nouveaux riche.
Now, the concern is for the “nouveaux pauvre”, who have become newly impoverished by losing their job or falling into debt or who struggle to make ends meet on a tiny pension or pay cheque.

Charities are reporting a rise in demand at shelters for the homeless for free meals and parcels of food, as these vulnerable people feel the lash of a worsening economic crisis.

Volunteers of America Greater Sacramento & Northern Nevada

Winter Shelter to open Monday, Nov. 24

The Winter Shelter,located at Cal Expo, operated by Volunteers of America and funded by the Sacramento County Department of Human Assistance (DHA), will open Monday, Nov. 24, 2008.
Able to house as many as 154 men, women and children each night throughout Sacramento’s cold and wet winter months, it will remain open through late March 2009.

The shelter provides clients shelter and two daily meals in a comfortable dorm-style environment. Residents may stay at the shelter for 14 consecutive days with extensions granted on a case-by-case basis. A valid TB clearance is required from each resident within three days of admittance for them to be able to remain at the shelter.

November 22, 2008 — Updated 0355 GMT (1155 HKT)

APEC leaders endorse ban on protectionism

LIMA, Peru (AP) — Leaders from 21 nations that account for half the world’s economy pledged not to implement protectionist measures for the next 12 months — no matter how punishing the global downturn gets.

As if things aren’t bad enough for the homeless, what does New York do?

N.Y. churches ordered not to shelter homeless

By VERENA DOBNIK

NEW YORK — Twenty-two churches have stopped providing shelter to homeless New Yorkers — on city orders.
With temperatures below freezing on Saturday, the churches had to follow a city rule requiring faith-based shelters to be open at least five days a week — or not at all.
Arnold Cohen, president of the Partnership for the Homeless, a nonprofit that serves as a link between city officials and shelters, delivered the news to the churches several weeks ago that they no longer qualify.

Jobless claims jump unexpectedly to 16-year high

November 20, 2008 – 1:09pm
By CHRISTOPHER S. RUGABER
AP Economics Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) – New claims for unemployment benefits jumped last week to a 16-year high, the Labor Department said Thursday, providing more evidence of a rapidly weakening job market expected to get even worse next year.
The government said new applications for jobless benefits rose to a seasonally adjusted 542,000 from a downwardly revised figure of 515,000 in the previous week. That’s much higher than Wall Street economists’ expectations of 505,000, according to a survey by Thomson Reuters.

Family homelessness rising in the United States

Wed Nov 12, 2008 1:07 am EST
By Ross Colvin – Analysis
WASHINGTON (Reuters) – President-elect
Barack Obama has vowed to help middle-class U.S. homeowners facing foreclosure, but he has said little about how he will help low-income families made homeless by a worsening economy.
Obama has spoken broadly about boosting affordable housing and restoring public housing subsidies. But with economists forecasting a deep recession in 2009, he may find it hard to find the money to fulfill those promises soon.

This one is not new but I imagine things are a lot worse now.

In hard times, tent cities rise across the country

Since foreclosure mess, homeless advocates report rise in encampments
updated 3:36 p.m. ET, Thurs., Sept. 18, 2008

RENO, Nev. – A few tents cropped up hard by the railroad tracks, pitched by men left with nowhere to go once the emergency winter shelter closed for the summer.
Then others appeared — people who had lost their jobs to the ailing economy, or newcomers who had moved to Reno for work and discovered no one was hiring.

Below is a related link:

NATIONAL COALITION FOR THE HOMELESS