Fair Trade Dogmatism vs. Unilateral Free Trade / Free Market / Live-and-let-live
As I say, I am a radical centrist. I saw what I thought were extremist arguments against "fair trade" and I argued for Fair. Had I seen over-simplistic arguments for "fair trade," I'd have joined you on the side of Free.
I think a country like Poland should be free — or even encouraged — to preserve their culture by subsidizing Polish art. Yet that goes against "Free Trade."
Which "Polish art"? Even if Poles agreed 100% that "Polish art" should be subsidized, they might still fight in the streets and slaughter each other over which art is the genuine "Polish art" and which is really alien or suspicious in origin and must first be approved by the House UnPolish Activities Committee before being certified as genuinely Polish.
There are many "shoulds" and "should-nots" which can be debated forever without much agreement between differing countries. This is why "Free Trade" should be mainly UNILATERAL, without being conditioned on the other country/trade partner having to agree to the same "shoulds" and "should-nots" before the trading can begin.
It's wrong for a government to subsidize any particular art, as if science can prove that this art is superior to that. But it's also wrong to demand that other countries practice this neutrality before we can trade with them. So this is an argument for
Unilateral Free Trade as opposed to bilateral agreements.
Is the issue of culture preservation the petard you want to be hoisted on?
That's only one of hundreds/thousands of obstacles to free trade, if it has to be bilateral. Therefore let's have Unilateral Free Trade with all nations -- including with Cuba, N. Korea, Myanmar, Saudi Arabia, China, and others who have some bad values or practices -- with virtually nothing they do interfering with the deal, no matter how badly we might condemn their behavior. We traded with China even though they had antidemocratic practices much worse than subsidizing Chinese art. And as a result there has been some moderation of their bad practices, through the interaction, the business dealings. Maybe in another 500-1000 years China will become a more ideal country in terms of human rights and tolerance and individual liberty. Or maybe not.
But Unilateral Free Trade is proving to be the right philosophy to deal with China or any other country. You're giving a good argument for Unilateral Free Trade, not an argument against free trade.
Let me close by emphasizing one fallacy. You treat The Market as some infallible God that by definition determines the unique "correct" price.
No, that's what "Fair Trade" is, pretending to determine the "unique 'correct" price as opposed to the price decided by the buyers and sellers (the market) in the daily transactions. The "market" price is just whatever the buyers and sellers are agreeing to in the ongoing commerce without anyone pretending to "determine" or judge what the "fair" prices should be instead of the prices happening haphazardly in the market through the thousands/millions of transactions driving prices up and down moment by moment.
Things are simply not so simple; labor prices are set much more haphazardly.
But you're describing the market, which is not simple and sets the prices haphazardly, day by day, moment by moment, from one location to another, depending on countless conditions which are constantly changing and so cannot be calculated by planners who presume to know what the "correct" or "fair" price is for something. "Simply" leaving the complex haphazard market alone works better.
The wages of an impoverished and oppressed people will be set to just slightly more than a living wage regardless of whether they're making cheap sweaters or Gucci bags.
No, they will sometimes be LOWER than the "living wage" because the worker's value is less than the "living wage" theory which tries to overrule the everyday market transactions and replace them with a moralistic dogma about a "decent standard of living" to which everyone is entitled regardless of their value in the market, or regardless of supply and demand.
No matter what figure you calculate that the "living wage" has to be, the reality is that the wage actually paid will sometimes be less than that number, because the normal market transactions going on do not recognize your pretentious theory of what people SHOULD be doing instead of what they actually do. The "living wage" judgmentalism cannot actually be imposed in all the millions of transactions going on to "set" the wages where the self-appointed experts calculate that they should be, because they cannot police all those millions of buyers and sellers. All they can do is preach sermons and find cases here and there where they can crack down on a buyer or seller and perhaps impose, in that one case, what they pretend is the genuine "living wage" as they define it.
It's written by a scholar of religion rather than a scholar of economics, but I recommend all Talksters read
this brilliant article about dogmatic faith in
The Market.
No, "the Market" is a reactionary idea, arising in response to the dogmatic interventionists.
To "believe in the Market" just means to reject all those who claim to know, from their Divine Revelation, what the True Righteous and Fair Price is for everything. So it's not a BELIEF IN something, but just a rejection of all the pundits and moralists and judgmentalists who presume to calculate the True Infallible Price for everything and then impose this onto society in opposition to what the prices would be if dogmatists would just stay out of it and leave buyers and sellers alone to make their decisions.
So to believe "in the Market" means just to leave people free to make their decisions, without pretending to know what's good for them, or what's good for society.
While the "fair trade" interventionists who want to regulate or control or overrule "the Market" are those driven by an obsession with this or that victim group, or this or that special interest promoting their gain at everyone else's expense and requiring a crackdown or stomping-down on someone who gets in their way, i.e., in the way of promoting the favored interest group at everyone else's expense.
And it's the resistance to these dogmatic interventionists which has led to the "Free Market" ideology, which teaches to leave everyone free to make their own decisions. So the "Free Market" faith is a reactionary mindset which would not exist except as a resistance to the interventionist "fair trade" dogmatism which keeps rearing its ugly head again and again, causing some to react against it.