This is a bit like a shoplifter saying that his only mistake was failing to pay. Does Ambrose think there is some other and more terrible form of plagiarism than using someone else’s sentences and pretending you wrote them?
Goodwin, whose publisher settled with one of her victims in 1987 — without bothering to inform readers — insisted that her plagiarism was the product of simple absent-mindedness on her part. She had taken notes from other books in longhand, she said, and then, when it came time to write, mistook the notes for her own original compositions.
How did it happen that vast tracts of her book were lifted from other sources? “The mechanical process of checking things was not as sophisticated as it should have been,” she allowed. Well, surely you wouldn’t expect a simple barefoot Harvard Ph.D. to employ a “sophisticated” approach for documenting her sources.
All these revelations will serve as an everlasting inspiration to ordinary scribes whose work is destined to line birdcages or swell remainder bins rather than make us rich and famous. While churning out unmemorable prose by the sweat of our brow may not seem like a great achievement, it’s more than some celebrated writers can manage.
And the next time my editor thinks my column isn’t up to snuff, I have the perfect comeback: “You think Stephen Ambrose could do better?”
Does free trade breed poverty?
Sunday, March 24, 2002
In the minds of some environmentalists, free trade ranks right up there with the Exxon Valdez as a despoiler of nature. A group called Global Exchange claims that free trade has caused poor countries to “cut down their forests, overfish their waters and exploit other natural resources.” Says the Sierra Club, “Current trade rules are too often used to undermine environmental protections . . . in the name of free trade.”
That’s one common indictment of globalization. Another popular one is the charge that expanded commerce among nations has put downward pressure on wages in Third World countries, aggravating income inequality and worsening the lives of the poor.
In the mythology of the left, this all fits together. Free trade, it’s said, unleashes a ruthless cycle of competition that punishes both poor nations and rich ones, by forcing all into a brutal and debilitating competition. Poor nations that allow rampant pollution and ecological destruction can take industry away from countries which try to protect the environment. Places where workers toil for pennies can attract multinational corporations, which see big profits from paying starvation wages.
Socially responsible countries are forced to lower their standards to compete. The more trade there is across borders, the more intense the pressure. It’s an endless race to the bottom that everyone loses.
But mythology, while it can produce entertaining tales, doesn’t have to be rooted in reality, and most of the left’s case against free trade is not. In fact, a growing body of evidence indicates that globalization advances the very goals it is accused of sabotaging.
The latest proof comes from a study published last year in the American Economic Review by economists Werner Antweiler, Brian Copeland and M. Scott Taylor. They looked at data on a major pollutant, sulfur dioxide, over the period from 1971 to 1996, when trade barriers were coming down and international commerce was expanding.
Environmentalists will be reassured to learn that countries which opened up to trade generated faster economic growth — which, these scholars say, produced more pollution. But that was not the only effect. It turns out that as nations grow richer, they and their people demand a cleaner environment. The first result comes sooner, but for the vast majority of countries, the second one has been much more important.
“That effect becomes pretty dominant,” says Antweiler, an economist at the University of British Columbia. As a general rule, “if trade liberalization raises gross domestic product per person by 1 percent, then pollution concentrations fall by about 1 percent.” In other words, Antweiler and his colleagues conclude, “free trade is good for the environment.”
Poor people may prefer pollution to starvation, but as their income rises, they no longer have to make that cruel tradeoff. The AER study, it should be noted, did find an exception to the rule — communist countries, whose governments were not overly influenced by the desires of their citizens.
The claim that free trade will increase poverty and inequity also appears to be built on sand. It discounts the most important economic experiment of our time — China’s decision in 1978 to open up an economy that was among the most tightly closed on earth. Since then, World Bank economists David Dollar and Aart Kraay point out in a recent issue of Foreign Affairs magazine, “China has seen the most spectacular reduction of poverty in world history.”
Over the last two decades, as trade has proliferated, the number of poor people in the world has dropped by 200 million, even as the Earth’s population rose. And countries that have liberalized trade have seen their average growth rates rise, while closed economies lagged.
Dollar and Kraay accept the prevailing view that in China, at least, progress against poverty has coincided with rising inequality — that though the poor have gotten richer, the rich have gotten richer faster. If that were the price of progress against poverty, it would certainly be worth paying. But another study suggests that far from increasing income gaps, free trade shrinks them.
In a working paper for the respected National Bureau of Economic Research, economist Shang-Jin Wei of the International Monetary Fund and Yi Wu of Georgetown University looked at urban-rural earnings disparities in some 100 different cities in China and nearby rural areas. What they found was the opposite of what is claimed by critics of globalization: The more open the city is to trade, the smaller the urban-rural gap. “Globalization has helped to reduce, rather than increase, urban-rural income inequality,” they conclude.
For a long time, many people on the left have said they’re 1) against poverty and pollution and 2) against free trade. One of these days, they’re going to have to make up their minds.
‘Delinquent’ no longer has to follow ‘juvenile’
Thursday, April 11, 2002
We adults often complain and despair over the ways of young people. Their headache-inducing music. Their drug and alcohol use. Their casual approach to sex. Their tattoos and body piercings. Their underdeveloped work ethic. Their sense of entitlement. Their attraction to gangs and guns.
So if you’re over the age of 30, you would not find it surprising to learn that the crime rate among American youngsters has risen sharply in recent years. That would merely confirm what so many people suspect: Our permissive culture has failed to instill self-respect and self-discipline in our children.
But that assumption is confounded by a fact that really is surprising: Between 1994 and 2000, the total number of juvenile arrests fell by 13 percent.
Actually, I’m grossly understating the good news. As the Urban Institute notes in a recent study by Jeffrey Butts and Jeremy Travis, the drop in violent crimes among children under 18 was even bigger.
Arrests for aggravated assault declined by 22 percent. They were down 25 percent for rape and 51 percent for robbery. Best of all, murder arrests plunged by 68 percent.
All this happened at the same time that the number of youngsters was growing. “The rate of juvenile crime in 2000 was lower than at any time in the previous decade,” report Butts and Travis.
This trend came as a surprise, to say the least. In the late 1980s and early ‘90s, kids went on a violent binge, boosting their murder rates by half. Conservatives blamed the trend on our lenient treatment of teenage hoodlums. Many experts looked toward the future and assured us that things were about to get even worse.
In