General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: NAFTA passed on Nov. 20, 1993, on the promise of jobs. Oddly enough . . . [View all]Spazito
(55,781 posts)figuring the American public would be prepared to pay more for their vehicles, vehicles technologically behind the Japanese vehicles. They were wrong in so many ways.
Without NAFTA, the American public would be paying far, far more for their imported oil, gas, water, electricity, automobiles, etc. There are those who say the cost should be higher forcing research and investment in alternative energy. That's all well and good for those who can afford the higher prices, not so much for the poor who can't afford even the reduced costs that exist today.
Trade agreements are trade offs, you give to receive, you don't get it all and give nothing which seems, for some, a hard concept to accept.
Corporations used to be national, no longer, they are multinationals, with NO allegiance to any country, they will go where the costs are lower, the profits higher. Isolationism will not change that, corporations will find other markets...China, India...where the market is 'richer' due to the vastly larger population to whom they can market their products, imo.