General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: NAFTA passed on Nov. 20, 1993, on the promise of jobs. Oddly enough . . . [View all]pampango
(24,692 posts)something else (which he gets no credit for, of course) driving the economy. When the economy dives after the Democrat leaves office, that's because the 'woes' of his misbegotten policy got dumped on his republican successor.
What if manufacturing employment had been declining for 15 years by the time of NAFTA? That decline was reversed temporarily after NAFTA only to resume when Bush II came into office. Is the decline in manufacturing under Bush II the fault of NAFTA? How about the decline from the 1980 until the mid- 1990's? Was that the fault of NAFTA, too?
Manufacturing jobs have been declining since the 1980 in the US and in every other developed country. Since the 1980 the only periods of increase in manufacturing employment was during the Clinton administration after NAFTA and under Obama starting in 2011. They had declined steadily for 12 years before Clinton and for 10 years afterwards, just increasing again starting in 2011. To blame a 35-year decline in manufacturing employment on NAFTA seems to be searching for a boogeyman.