Vox notes that the reality of "free trade" contradicts the supposition.
It's simply not possible for there to be vast dollar balances sitting there in overseas accounts, remaining unused. After all, as we learned from Henry Hazlitt, "Because we have permitted the British to sell more to us, they are now able to buy more from us. They are, in fact, eventually forced to buy more from us if their dollar balances are not to remain perpetually unused. So as a result of letting in more British goods, we must export more American goods."
Yah, except:
Some of the nation’s largest corporations have amassed vast profits outside the country and are pressing Congress and the Obama administration for a tax break to bring the money home. Apple has $12 billion waiting offshore, Google has $17 billion and Microsoft, $29 billion.... “For every billion dollars that we invest, that creates 15,000 to 20,000 jobs either directly or indirectly,” Jim Rogers, the chief of Duke Energy, said at the conference. Duke has $1.3 billion in profits overseas.
So. According to Hazlitt, those dollars simply cannot be over there. They must be here!
Oops.
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2 comments:
"So. According to Hazlitt, those dollars simply cannot be over there. They must be here!"
In what you quoted he only says they must "eventually" return if they are to be spent.
Well, sure. The first 100 years don't count.
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