Full text: International trade

38 
INTERNATIONAL TRADE 
countries to the same goods) they will tend to be lower in price. 
Conversely they will tend to be higher if the effectiveness of labor 
in producing them is small. 
Concerning real wages also — wages in terms of commodities — 
no general rule can be laid down. Most persons would say that 
the people of the country where high wages prevail are more pros- 
perous than those of countries with low wages. They may be or 
may not be. They are indeed better off as purchasers and con- 
sumers of international commodities; these being at the same 
prices everywhere. As regards domestic commodities, on which 
much the larger part of their money income is spent, they may be 
better off or may not be. It depends on the prices of these, which 
depend in turn, as we have just seen, on the effectiveness of labor 
in making them. The prices of domestic commodities may be 
higher than in other countries, and the people of the high-money- 
wages country, tho prosperous as purchasers of foreign goods, may 
be so much less prosperous in their domestic transactions that the 
net balance may be against them : their commodity wages may be 
less than in countries with low money wages. 
I have just referred to the common but mistaken impression that 
a country of high money wages is necessarily more prosperous than 
one with low money wages. There are other common impressions 
even more widespread and more unqualifiedly wrong. Perhaps 
most familiar and most unfounded of all is the belief that complete 
freedom of trade would bring about an equalization of money wages 
the world over. It is a belief held especially in countries of high 
wages like the United States, and it goes with — indeed, is a part 
of — the most persuasive argument in favor of a policy of tariff 
protection. It seems plain as a pikestaff to the average person — 
to the average employer not less than to the average workman — 
that the country in which money wages are low can undersell 
the country paying high money wages; and that if the two 
compete without restriction, wages must become the same in 
both. The reasoning of the preceding chapters shows that there 
is no such tendency to equalization. Countries with high money 
wages trade with those of low money wages, to the advantage
	        
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