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In reply to the discussion: Why I defend NAFTA on DU, in four charts [View all]4Q2u2
(1,406 posts)Last edited Wed Jan 7, 2015, 09:40 AM - Edit history (1)
It also sounds like when Shrub congratulated one woman on having 3 jobs. Her net income may have even went up, but at what cost.
Spider also pointed out that many of the jobs created after NAFTA were high paying info sector jobs that would skew any income chart. It also does not take into account how much more or larger wage increases would have been without NAFTA effecting manufacturing.
How much were those wage factors maintained by economic black mail. Pitting companies against the tax payer interest with the company threating to go to Mexico or overseas if incentives were not given to them. That is not reflected anywhere.
Taking such a broad and general view of wages is the last thing we should hang our hat on. Are we to be satisfied that Silicon Valley is doing great while Fly Over country has had their job base destroyed. Pay went up in Seattle so what if Detroit is laid to waste.
It is all well and good to say NAFTA was great because it did not effect your industry or you personally and your numbers back you up, but in the circle of people and my business wages are stagnant and have back slid in a lot of cases.
Microsoft tells me that H1B visas are a great program an needed. I am sure I could find a chart to tell me that also.