• AES_Enjoyer@reddthat.com
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    22 hours ago

    If there’s no free trade, the people in those areas would have nobody to sell goods to, which is developing their economies

    The main argument against this is that these areas are not developing. Take the famous Steven Pinker graphs of poverty reduction worldwide, and extract China from them: look at poverty numbers in the world without including China. You’ll see that poverty isn’t being relieved outside China, I.e. these countries aren’t really developing. They’re selling their resources for cheap and obtaining essentially nothing in return. This is known in Marxist economics as “unequal exchange” and I highly encourage you to read on it if you’re interested on the reasons for the underdevelopment of the global south. The wikipedia article itself is a good starting point.

    The rest of your comment hinges on this crucial point of assuming theyre actually developing, that’s why I’m only answering to this point.

    • boonhet@sopuli.xyz
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      12 hours ago

      If you read the rest of my comment, I acknowledged that foreign capitalists are taking all the profit. The question is, what’s the solution? Because any local leadership in such a country, whether left or right wing, is likely to be corrupt and serving their own interests over that of the people.

      • AES_Enjoyer@reddthat.com
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        10 hours ago

        any local leadership in such a country, whether left or right wing, is likely to be corrupt and serving their own interests over that of the people.

        Well, my position as a communist is that the local leadership should be supported on popular grassroots movements, which will no doubt spawn in these countries eventually as they did naturally in Iran with Mosaddeq, in Cuba with Fidel, or in China with Mao. Of course, only socialist leaders fight to improve the actual living conditions of the people, which is why all poverty alleviation in the past half a century comes from China, which took 800 million people out of poverty and extreme poverty.