Categories: Global BusinessTrade

Trade: A Better Path to Freedom

 WE’RE HEARING A LOT about “freedom” these days and how it requires a major escalation of military spending to achieve it. In some cases, that may be necessary. But an important part of the debate is missing.

The question is, Freedom from what? Everybody understands freedom from tyranny. But a far larger percentage of the world’s population is yearning for freedom from civil and ethnic strife, from hunger, from not being able to drink the water, from dying at a tender age. What are the solutions to those yearnings for freedom? Guns don’t seem to work.

We think business and globalization are part of the answer and the Bush Administration ought to begin recognizing that. We’d argue that business and trade, on balance, bring about more positive than negative results: American CEOs are building factories, creating R&D centers, offering new products, spurring trade, training workers and paying taxes in countries around the world.

Although outsourcing is still intensely controversial, it is creating jobs in India, the Philippines and even Africa. If you believe in free trade, you have to accept that it is desirable to allow less developed countries with abundant manpower to trade their services. It is much the same with the exchange of goods. While furniture companies may be closing factories in North Carolina, they are creating bright futures in China.

Asia is, of course, the best example of what prosperity creates: the chances of a Chinese invasion of Taiwan, nuclear war between North and South Korea or bitter conflict between India and Pakistan€¦quot;all these possibilities have been sharply reduced because everyone has an economic stake to defend.

What can any president do to spread prosperity and therefore freedom? One step is to create an environment in which American CEOs have confidence in their domestic operating climate. The rising tide of regulation, litigation and out-of-control costs should be checked. Corporate leaders also need to enjoy an international climate in which U.S. business is well-received, not mistrusted.

In short, if we truly believe in freedom, military action may be more divisive than it is helpful. At a bare minimum, the administration should establish a new balance in its foreign policy. It should recognize that trade is, in some ways, a more lasting solution than armed intervention. As George Washington once said, “I am for free commerce with all nations; political connection with none; and little or no diplomatic establishment.” Obviously, we still need diplomacy. But arguably, trade should be as paramount as it was for one of the nation’s founders.

admin

Share
Published by
admin

Recent Posts

Calero CRO Eric Martorano Knows Stories Can Be Our Most Powerful Tool

Calero, argues that data informs but stories drive action—making narrative clarity a core leadership skill…

6 hours ago

The 3 Lessons Of Tim Cook

There are many, of course, from the Apple CEO, who just announced he is stepping…

8 hours ago

An Autism Diagnosis At 55 Reframed This CEO’s Entire Life

From naval combat to building companies, his remarkable ability to remain calm wasn’t coldness or…

2 days ago

Raising The Bar: A More Disciplined Way To Hire Senior Leaders

Without a forward-looking lens, even a well-run process can produce the wrong outcome.

4 days ago

The State Of The States: Who’s Building The Future Of Business?

As the nation marks a quarter millennium, Chief Executive’s annual CEO survey of the Best…

4 days ago

Best & Worst States For Business 2026: Inside The Rankings

Our annual survey of more than 650 CEOs, presidents and business owners—with representation from every…

4 days ago