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My Personal Trade Deficit
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To my vast delight, a Barnes
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& Noble superstore has arrived in Pittsford, N.Y., about a mile from my
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home in the neighboring town of Brighton. I shop at Barnes & Noble several
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times a week--mostly for books, sometimes for music, occasionally for software,
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and nearly always for coffee.
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My trade deficit with
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Pittsford has grown explosively since Barnes & Noble arrived. In other
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words, I spend more money in Pittsford than I did before. A trade deficit is
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the amount you spend in a given place minus the amount you earn there. (A trade
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surplus is just the opposite: The amount you earn in a given place minus the
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amount you spend there.) I don't earn any income in Pittsford, so my trade
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deficit is equal to the amount I spend.
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I've been thinking about trade deficits because I picked up
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the local newspaper this morning and read an op-ed piece about the U.S. trade
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deficit with Mexico. It says that, pre-NAFTA, the United States had a trade
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surplus with Mexico--the average American earned more in Mexico than he
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spent there. (Producing goods for sale to Mexicans counts as "earning in
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Mexico"; buying goods made by Mexicans counts as "spending in Mexico.") Today
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the opposite is true: The United States has a trade deficit with Mexico, and
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it's growing.
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According
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to the op-ed piece, that's proof that the average American was better off
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without NAFTA. But the identical logic "proves" that I was better off without
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Barnes & Noble. Not only is the conclusion false, it's the exact opposite
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of the truth. When people take advantage of new opportunities to buy things
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they want, it usually makes them happier.
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The truth is that any change in our
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trade position with respect to Mexico--in either direction--is evidence that
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free trade has been good for Americans. My neighbor got a job at the new Barnes
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& Noble. His trade surplus with Pittsford grew, just like my own
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trade deficit . In both cases, the changes meant that our lives had got
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better.
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The same
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analogy illustrates another point: Although NAFTA-induced changes in the
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U.S.-Mexican trade deficit are evidence of improvements, the actual
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level of the trade deficit means virtually nothing. If Barnes &
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Noble had located in the town of Penfield instead of in Pittsford, I'd have a
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higher trade deficit with Penfield, a lower trade deficit with Pittsford, and
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my life would be about the same as it is now.
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Amore interesting number is my overall trade
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deficit--the total of all my spending minus the total of all my earning. My
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overall trade deficit was pretty high yesterday: I spent $600 on a living-room
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rug, and I earned $0. (It was a Sunday and I didn't feel like working.) My
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overall trade deficit was $600.
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Traditionally, business
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journalists describe every increase in the overall trade deficit as a
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"worsening." According to that tradition, I had a very bad day yesterday. But
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it didn't feel like a bad day--I like my new rug, and it would
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have been inconvenient to put off buying it until a day when I felt like
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earning enough to pay for it.
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When the
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nation's overall trade deficit increases, it means that Americans, on average,
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are spending more than they are earning. Maybe that's because your neighbors
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are behaving foolishly; maybe it's just because they have the good sense to
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realize that you can sometimes spend more than you earn--provided you're
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willing to draw down your savings.
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In any event, foolishly excessive trade
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surpluses are a greater danger than foolishly excessive trade
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deficits . That's because excessive trade deficits are self-limiting: If
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you run a trade deficit every year, bankruptcy will eventually force you to
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stop. But excessive trade surpluses can go on forever. A perpetual trade
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surplus is likely to mean you're either working too hard or consuming too
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little; either way, you're not getting enough enjoyment out of life.
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Here's the final thing you
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should keep in mind when you read about the nation's overall trade deficit: The
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nation is nothing but the sum of individual households. But there are limits to
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how much you ought to care about what goes on in other people's households.
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Even if you are convinced that the average American spends too much, or earns
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too little, or spends too little, or earns too much, it's not entirely clear
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why it's any of your business. As long you have your own household in order,
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fretting about your neighbor's spending habits is a lot like fretting about the
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color of his living-room rug. Maybe lime green was a big mistake, but it's
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his mistake to live with.
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