The number of jobs in the
Middlesex and Essex counties have
been dwindling for years, and people have been moving away from the
district. The
economic vitality is dwindling, much the same way that the textile jobs
left
the area in the 1950s. My
friends in Lynn
tell of whole blocks of GE buildings that have been turned in to
parking
lots. I have
watched the companies I
have worked for shift their jobs to Europe,
China
and India.
But we do not have to
accept this fate. There
is hope. And that
hope is found through a change in
direction.
The first question that
needs an honest answer is why anyone
would hire a worker from Massachusetts
rather than a worker from the Far East. What qualities do we have
in the global
economy? What is
our unique value
proposition that we have to offer the international community?
As a Congressman, these
are the hard questions that Rich
Baker will ask to determine what we add to the world economy, and to
determine what
we can do to preserve and enhance the advantages we have.
Are Massachusetts
workers cheaper than workers in places like China
or India? Absolutely not. A company can hire six
workers for the wages
on one person in Massachusetts.
Do we want to lower our
wages to compete on price? I
don’t think so, because workers could not
afford the housing and heating costs in the Northeast on significantly
lower
wages.
Do we work harder than
our foreign counterparts? Yes,
but not the six times harder that we
need to work to reach parity with our Far East
competitors. The
value equation is still
against us, and with most Americans working close to 2000 hours a year,
we don’t
have time or energy to significantly increase our work.
But can we work smarter? Now we are starting to get
somewhere. Massachusetts
is the home
to MIT, Harvard, and many other universities and colleges. Some of the top
researchers and scientists
call this are their home. Many
students
graduate in Massachusetts
and
stay here to work. The
state has a huge knowledge
base and is the home to many key labs and top inventors.
To maintain our value, to
increase the opportunities in Massachusetts,
we need to find policies that will preserve our knowledge of the area,
to
preserve our competitive advantage.
In the Middle Ages,
craftsmen formed guilds and kept the
methodology of their trade a secret. This
allowed them to maintain their
competitive advantage, and to keep good wages.
Today, these same trade
secrets are kept by companies
through the patent and trade secret laws.
In order for Massachusetts
to maintain it unique value proposition, we need strong patent and
trade secret
laws to protect our inventions, our ideas, from being copied. With a computer and the
Internet, ideas can
be copied in a matter of minutes to the far corners of the world, to
places
where manufacturing is cheap, where copying can be done for a fraction
of the
cost in Massachusetts. I have seen projects cost
corporations
millions of dollars in research and development to produce, employing
many
local engineers at good salaries, be copied by competitors for a
fraction of
the development costs. The
competition
enters a market without risk for a fraction of the cost, and the
original
company looses out. After
two or three
similar incidents, the company will just stop investing in the
research,
because it is not cost effective.
And
the jobs disappear.
We need strong patent
laws in the United States
to protect our ideas, to protect our
inventors, to protect our jobs, from infringers.
For the past several years, many in Congress
have been working hard to water down our patent laws, trying to make it
easier for
copiers to steal ideas. As
an
Intellectual Property Executive, I know the impact of these changes on
the Massachusetts
economy, and I will fight efforts to weaken our protection in the
global
economy.
We need a Congressman
that understands finance, understands
business, and understands economics, someone who will defend the
economy of the
6th Massachusetts Congressional District. We need someone who
knows how
to create jobs so that the district can grow, so that its citizens can
find
jobs closer to home, so that the quality of life can be improved for
all of the
workers in Essex and Middlesex
Counties.
Rich Baker has been working for years in local corporations.
He
has experience
in working for international and multinational corporations, and
understands
how they operate. Rich Baker has spent years negotiating with
corporations, both large and small, and knows how to convince them of
the
advantages of locating in the District.
The economic leadership of the Massachusetts
6th Congressional District has been missing for the past 12 years.
It is
time for a change.
And the opportunity to change is coming next
November. A chance to
cast your vote to change Congress. A vote for Richard Baker
is that vote
for change.