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Populist trade policies will not protect jobs anywhere in the world
Populist trade policies will not protect jobs anywhere in the world
As US and European political leaders fret about the future of quality
jobs, they would do well to look at the far bigger problems faced by
developing Asia – problems that threaten to place massive downward
pressure on global wages. In India, where per capita income is roughly a
tenth that of the US, more than 10 million people a year are leaving
the countryside and pouring into urban areas, and they often cannot find
work even as chaiwalas,
much less as computer programmers. The same angst that Americans and
Europeans have about the future of jobs is an order of magnitude higher
in Asia.
Should India
aim to follow the traditional manufacturing export model that Japan
pioneered and that so many others, including China, have followed? Where
would that lead if, over the next couple of decades, automation is
going to make most such jobs obsolete?
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