That would be one way to make such a standard. To say: We want people to produce everywhere, including the very poorest countries, but they have to have some system within that country where wages rise proportionate to rising productivity and profit or whatever measure you use.
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William Greider: In Washington, big ideas for financial reform are suddenly gaining momentum.
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William Greider: Goldman and the other big dogs of Wall Street are afflicted with the stink of greed, having harvested swollen fortunes from the calamity they caused for the rest of the country.
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I would argue some other countries I can think of, and I won't mention names, but there are significant emerging markets where you've had a fair bit of growth...and you still have had very little effect on the poverty rate. And middle-income people haven't done all that well either. So the political economic elites had all this economic benefit and they were indifferent to the poverty, to the poor. Can I go off the record? [names a country where elites notoriously ignore the poor]
Boy, I'd like to put that on the record.
I bet you would.
But go back to what you said--"something like this ought to be the objective of the global system."
Yeah, how you accomplish that, I don't know.
The other side--labor and other liberals--would acknowledge that it has the potential just to be a simple protectionist measure but, if it's done with genuine objective so that both ends of the system benefit, that is, workers, it is not beyond devising some set of rules. Would you be for that at least in principle?
I think it's the right objective. But how you get there--I guess that's one of the things that troubles me.... But I think the conception seems sort of right to me. So, conceptually, the answer is I think I would be. On the other hand, the problem is the people who try to design those rules always seem to be doing it in a way that stops trade liberalization rather than for the objective I just mentioned. Maybe that's unfair, but it's certainly struck me that way.
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