Perspectives on Free Market System
Grove's suggestions drew sharp criticism from several
columnists who said protectionist policies would cost the United
States jobs. They also were surprised that a
man like Grove, who helped built Intel into the tech powerhouse that it is
today, would come up with such ideas.
In a Wall
Street Journal blog headlined "Andy Grove from Intel Is Wrong,"
James Altucher, while praising Grove's accomplishments, said protectionism has
never worked for any country, including the United
States. Countries that have flourished have
done so through free trade and open markets, he argued, pointing to Germany
and Japan after
World War II.
"So what if we have outsourced 100,000s of low-level semiconductor manufacturing jobs to China?" Altucher asked. "Silicon Valley has continued to innovate with Google, Facebook, eBay, Amazon, etc. There are lines around the block still for the latest Apple iPhone, and the chip makers for the iPhone ... don't seem too worried that they have to outsource to Foxconn in China."
If the manufacturing jobs are brought back to the United
States, he asked, what would be the result?
"Would a trade war start that would drive up prices even
further? Furthermore, would the resulting spikes in unemployment in the Third
World countries we outsource to suddenly dip into massive
recessions, causing a global spiral down in the economy?" Altucher asked.
Reihan Salam, a policy adviser at e21 and a fellow at the New America
Foundation, in a column
in Forbes said Grove brought up some good points-"The decline
of manufacturing employment really has coincided with a broader deterioration
in the economic prospects of less-skilled American workers," he wrote-but argued
that huge tax shifts would likely lead to fewer U.S. jobs.
"The U.S.
badly needs job and income growth," Salam wrote. "But it won't come
from the manufacturing sector. Rather, it will come from a wrenching series of
labor market and entitlement and tax reforms designed to improve work
incentives, most of which will prove far less popular than simply bashing China."
Not everyone disagrees with Grove. Brooke Crothers, a former IDC
analyst who lived in Japan
for 10 years, in a
commentary on Cnet said countries throughout Asia
have adopted Japan's
successful manufacturing philosophy to build their own economies.
Crothers also pointed out that while many in the United
States call for a pure free market system,
the rest of the world doesn't work the same way, which puts the United
States at a disadvantage.
Free market proponents worry that such actions as Grove
suggests would spur a trade war-which Crothers argues Asian countries are
already waging-and that the United States would end up paying higher prices for
products. However, the result would be more jobs.
"Yes, the free market is a powerful force and invaluable
for creating companies and jobs," Crothers wrote. "But it's not
perfect and not, in its pure form, practically applicable in a world that plays
by other rules. That's what Grove is saying. Far from radical, it's a prudent
and necessary argument."
"So what if we have outsourced 100,000s of low-level semiconductor manufacturing jobs to China?" Altucher asked. "Silicon Valley has continued to innovate with Google, Facebook, eBay, Amazon, etc. There are lines around the block still for the latest Apple iPhone, and the chip makers for the iPhone ... don't seem too worried that they have to outsource to Foxconn in China."









