Many of those who oppose the World Trade Organization (WTO)
advocate something they call "fair trade," in contrast
to the "free trade" the WTO advocates. In fact, the
kind of commerce promoted by the WTO is anything but free, while
the alternatives defended by its opponents are in no way fair.
Both the WTO and most of its critics, who range from old-fashioned
right-wing nationalists to labor activists, environmentalists,
and leftists of various kinds, favor continued government intervention
in economic activities, whether domestic or international. And
any such state-regulated trade will never be either free or
fair.
All governments around the world interfere in the economies
of the countries they rule and intervene in cross-border trade
on a regular basis. They subsidize some businesses, like agriculture
in the united states and europe, pay for international advertising
for wealthy corporations, and institute tariffs and customs rules
that ban or complicate the free flow of goods between people on
opposite sides of political borders. Such rules and regulations
favor powerful domestic businesses at the expense of producers
in other countries.
"Free" trade agreements and organizations like NAFTA
and WTO may alter some of the details of this intervention, but
do not challenge the principle that governments are entitled to
tell their subjects what they may and may not buy and whom they
may trade with. Under NAFTA, for instance, it is illegal to buy
lower-priced therapeutic drugs in canada and resell them in the
united states. WTO does not propose to free up trade between individuals,
either. It sets rules which the bureaucrats who run the organization
feel best serve the interests of corporations favored by the various
governments that make it up. It does not even take into consideration
private, voluntary arrangements among individuals and groups,
unsupervised by regulatory bodies, customs officials, border guards,
"public health" functionaries, coast guards, etc. It
just promotes continued government oversight of people trying
to engage in commerce with each other.
Most critics of WTO also advocate government supervision of
economic matters. Unions urge governments to bar imports of goods
which sell more cheaply than those produced by their members.
Environmentalists want governments to implement regulations that
protect wildlife and limit pollution. Human rights activists want
governments to force businesses to allow their employees to organize
to improve their working conditions. The goals of these people
are admirable: protecting well-paid jobs, defending plants and
animals against exploitation and death, and enabling low-wage
workers to improve their economic status. However, the means advocated
to achieve these goals are the same sort WTO promotes: government
force. No one seems to be proposing an alternate means of achieving
a better world for working people in all countries, as well as
the beings with whom we share this planet.
Many have expressed concerns about the WTO weakening national
sovereignty, implying that the united states government is a force
for good that should be defended. They seem to forget that the
federal government robs workers in this country while dispensing
corporate welfare. Such critics fail to understand that the united
states and other national governments routinely limit individual
sovereignty, the only kind that is really important. Different
levels of government may be more or less oppressive or just, depending
on the specific situation and the specific interests of the individual
concerned, but none have any moral justification for any of their
actions. They all steal money from workers in the form of taxes,
enforce laws perpetuating unfair land ownership, maintain a monopoly
on the means of exchange, and defend the unjustly-gained wealth
of the rich, thus impoverishing working people. And they should
all be opposed.
Protesters against WTO have pointed out that it is not democratic,
unlike at least some of the national governments to which it is
contrasted. Granted, the governments of the united states, the
european union, canada, india, japan and elsewhere are elected,
democratic ones, but this does not mean they are legitimate, benign,
or represent the interests of individual residents of the countries
they rule. The democratic government of the united states, for
instance, makes war on people in kosovo and iraq, supports the
chinese police state, subsidizes the growing of tobacco and other
favored crops in the united states, and bans the domestic use
of therapeutic drugs available in other countries. And this is
the same government some critics of WTO seem to feel can be an
advocate for the interests of the world's workers and natural
environment. We need to get the various national democratic governments,
as well as the WTO, off the backs of the people they push around
and brutalize. If democracy, like voting, really changed anything,
it would be prohibited.
Abolishing WTO and NAFTA will not benefit working people here
or abroad. Abolishing government would. Stemming cross-border
trade will not raise the wages of mexican workers, improve conditions
in malaysian factories, or lighten the load of chinese farmers
and laborers. International trade has not hurt these people: international
governments have, by restricting their freedoms in such a way
that they have little choice but to slave away at unjust wages
for wealthy others. Governments all over the world deny their
working subjects economic freedom and favor the interests of the
wealthy owners of land and industry, thus impoverishing the many
and enriching the few, who in turn enrich the politicians.
Real free trade would look nothing like what exists now or
would exist with WTO in charge. Without governments to prohibit
people from living their lives as they see fit, free people
could set up their own forms of money and banks to increase the
availability of credit to regular people. Their money would not
be stolen from them by predatory governments. They would not de
disarmed by their democratic representatives and rendered unable
to defend their land and property from voracious multinational
corporations favored by politicians. They would not be forced
by governments to pay rent to landowners who can claim title to
land and property only because governments support ownership of
land neither used nor occupied by the owners. And workers would
be free to take possession of the factories and other means of
production which they currently use, since there would be no government
to enforce the demand of the current "owners" for a
portion of the labor of others. Without having to sacrifice any
portion of the wealth generated by their own labor, free workers
would be affluent workers. Such people would be free to exchange
goods and services with others, regardless of geographic location
or ethnicity, as long as the interaction was voluntary. If trade
were really free, the only exchanges that people would agree to
would be fair ones. And true, unhindered competition between various
worker-owners all over the world would prevent some from accumulating
vast amounts of wealth at the expense of others.
Real free trade would be risky in ways that a government supervised
economy would not be. There would be no state-run welfare system,
no labor laws, no laws against pollution and the wanton slaughter
of wildlife. But that does not mean individuals and the natural
environment would be set adrift to fend for themselves. People
are more than capable of forming voluntary organizations to provide
for hard times, assist each other with creating jobs, facilitate
direct commerce between producers, and campaign for a more humane
treatment of non-human beings. People free to trade with each
other would also be free to look at the ways they live and work
and come up with ways to do both that are more humane and ecologically
sound than those that currently exist. They have done this all
through history and do it now, alongside the institutions of the
warfare/welfare state.
Anarchy and free trade would not solve all problems or lead to a utopia. They simply would free up people to interact with others as they choose, to the benefit of both, or all, parties. Individuals and voluntary associations would then be free to trade fairly with each other, band together as they see fit to promote their common interests, and protect their shared environment, all without being pushed around by politicians and the economic elites they empower and defend.