Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Fact-checking Le Pen: Does free trade create ‘slaves in developing nations’?
Fact-checking Le Pen: Does free trade create ‘slaves in developing nations’?
Apr 1, 2026 11:19 AM

In her CPAC speech, Marion Maréchal-Le Pen linked free trade with slavery in the developing world.

The former member of the French National Assemblysaid:

If we want to make France great again, we must defend our economic interests in the global market. The EU submits us to petition with the rest of the world. We cannot accept a model thatcreates slavesin developing nations andunemployedin Western countries.

Is it true that the free market “creates slaves in developing nations”?

The Global Slavery Index is the most objective measure of slavery in every nation of the world (though its methodology has been questioned). Comparing the prevalence of slavery in a nation with the rates of economic freedom measured in the Fraser Institute’s World Economic Freedom Index and the Heritage Foundation’s 2018 Index of Economic Freedom allows us to test Le Pen’s statement.

The two lists look nearly like mirror images.

The nation with the largest proportion of slaves is North Korea. Unsurprisingly, it is ranked dead last by Heritage.

Of the 10 nations with the highest proportion of slaves which were also evaluated by the Fraser Institute, seven rank among the world’s “Least Free” economies. (North Korea, among other economically stifling nations, is not evaluated.) The Heritage Foundation lists only one (Qatar) as “Mostly Free.”

On the other hand, all but one of the nations with the lowest proportion of slaves ranked in the world’s top quartile for economic freedom. (The lowest score belonged to Belgium.)

The tables are as follows:

Nations with the highest proportion of slaves

Nation World Economic Freedom Index Index of Economic Freedom
North Korea Not Ranked Repressed (180)
Uzbekistan Not Ranked Mostly Unfree (152)
Cambodia 2nd  quartile (63) Mostly Unfree (101)
India 3rd quartile (93) Mostly Unfree (130)
Qatar 2nd quartile (45) Mostly Free (29)
Pakistan Least Free (127) Mostly Unfree (131)
Democratic Republic of Congo Least Free (147) Mostly Unfree (147)
Sudan Not Ranked Repressed (161)
Iraq Not Ranked Not Ranked
Afghanistan Not Ranked Mostly Unfree (154)
Yemen Least Free (123) Not Ranked
Syria Least Free (153) Not Ranked
Libya Least Free (154) Not Ranked
Central African Republic Least Free (158) Repressed (163)
Mauritania Least Free (145) Mostly Unfree (134)

Nations with the lowest proportion of slaves

Nation World Economic Freedom Index Index of Economic Freedom
Luxembourg Most Free (28) Mostly Free (14)
New Zealand Most Free (3) Free (3)
Ireland Most Free (5) Free (6)
Norway Most Free (25) Mostly Free (23)
Denmark Most Free (15) Mostly Free (12)
Switzerland Most Free (4) Mostly Free (4)
Austria Most Free (26) Mostly Free (32)
Sweden Most Free (27) Mostly Free (15)
Belgium 2nd quartile (42) Moderately Free (52)
Australia Most Free (9) Free (5)

That suggests a strong correlation between an open economy – including free trade – and reduced human trafficking.

What about political “slavery”?

If modern slavery does not flourish in capitalist countries, what about the prevalence of dictatorial regimes?

“Overall, it may be said that countries with greater economic freedom tend to have a high level of electoral freedom, and vice-versa,”according to theWorld Electoral Freedom Index, produced by (neighboring) Spain’sFoundation for the Advancement of Liberty.Citizens have greater freedom to vote, run for office, and have their vote shape policy in economically free nations, the reported concluded.

Only a system of free and informed exchange can “bring about co-ordination without coercion” within a society, Milton Friedman explained in Capitalism and Freedom.

But “globalizationpromotes democracy both directly and indirectly,” wrote Jagdish Bhagwati. “Rural farmers are now able to bypass the dominant classes and castes by taking their produce directly to the market.” The resultant prosperity allows the newly empowered peasants to assert their political will. “Globalization leads to prosperity, and prosperity in turn leads to democratization of politics with the rise of the middle class,” he wrote.

On the other hand, EU tariffs are one of many barriers to the formation of a prosperous African middle class.

petition”? True, but….

Marion Maréchal-Le Pen asserted that the EU subjects France to petition with the rest of the world.” The EU is a customs union that artificially inflates the price of imported goods, which disproportionately harms developing nations. Its Common Agricultural Policy slaps an 18 percent tariff on imported food to petition with the EU’s government-subsidized farmers. Other tariffs disincentivize developing nations from producing value-added, finished goods that would enhance and diversify their economies. African nations hope forming a Continental Free Trade Area (CFTA) will help them leverage a better deal with the EU.

The EU certainly subjects France to petition,” but the deck is stacked against the world’s poorest nations.

Having it both ways

Finally, as Michael Brendan Dougherty observed atNational Review, the idea that free trade generates slavery “differs from Trump’s contention that foreign countries are getting the better deal out of free trade.” Either “we’ve made other countries rich” (to quote Donald Trump’s inaugural address), or we’ve allowed rapacious capitalist slave-drivers to colonize and enslave the noble indigenous populations of multiple continents. The two notions do not fortably beside one other.

Conclusion

The data appear to show that economic openness – with private property rights and the rule of law – reduces, rather than facilitates political repression and human slavery.

This is important for people of faith. The Apostle Paul clearly presented slavery as patible with Christianity in the Book of Philemon. In a joint statement last February, the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Church of England condemned “all forms of human enslavement as the most heinous of sins, inasmuch as it violates the free will and the integrity of every human being created in the image of God.” Those who oppose human or political slavery may want to encourage the policies that create greater stability and prosperity: economic liberty and the rule of law.

domain.)

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
A papal challenge to globalization
While we await Pope Benedict’s first social encyclical, it has been interesting to note what he has been saying on globalization and other socio-economic issues affecting the world today. None of these amounts to a magisterial statement but there are nonetheless clues to his social thought. So that makes his address to the Centesimus Annus pro Pontifice Foundation noteworthy. The Pope spoke about the current state of globalization, reminding the audience that the aim of economic development must serve the...
European foreign aid caught between dishonesty and incompetence
International aid groups have criticized the EU and many of its member states for falling behind their promises to step up foreign aid to 0.5 per cent of GDP by 2010 and 0.7 per cent by 2015. On the one hand, these groups are right to expose the accounting tricks governments use in order to promote themselves as saviors of Africa. On the other hand, the aid groups should consider very carefully whether their focus on state aid is really...
Dealing with rising gas prices
As the Drudge Report today hails ing of the fuel-efficient Smart car, it might be worth pointing out other ways in which people are adapting to deal with higher fuel prices. I don’t mean to minimize any of the pain associated with skyrocketing energy costs, whether personal (I feel it, too) or economy-wide, but it is interesting to observe the myriad and often unexpected effects of price changes. It’s the market working. Or, to put it another way, it’s the...
Book Review: Carl Anderson’s ‘A Civilization of Love’
On March 29, Carl Anderson’s A Civilization of Love (HarperOne, 2008) first appeared on the New York Times Best Seller list as one of hottest-selling books in America among the “Hard Cover Advice” category. Since then the author has been on an energetic European and American tour to promote his book. In just 200 pages, Anderson writes convincingly to elaborate a treatise to dispel dominant secular ideologies whose ethical frameworks falsely aim at human fulfillment and forming good and just...
Is this capitalism?
Is this supposed to be capitalism? Geoff Colvin writes that a motivating factor in the recent crash in corporate profits, as well as the sharp decline in home values, was the phenomenon that “people began to believe that the more they borrowed, the better off they would be. Their thinking went like this: With the cost of capital so low and asset prices rising steadily, risk was evaporating.” The precipitating cause of the downturn was that consumers “began to live...
Budget hero
A good hump day timewaster: APM’s Budget Hero. Try to achieve the national security, efficient government, and economic stimulus badges all at the same time. I couldn’t on my first try, although I admit I was leaning much more heavily on the “efficient government” side of the ledger. Plus there were all the built-in biases to deal with… ...
Intellectual foundations of evangelicalism
In an interview promoting his recent book Faith in the Halls of Power: How Evangelicals Joined the American Elite, D. Michael Lindsay, describes what he sees to be the intellectual sources of evangelicalism: And the interesting thing is that the Presbyterian tradition, the Reformed tradition, has provided some of the intellectual gravitas for evangelical ascendancy. And it’s being promulgated in lots of creative ways so that you have the idea of Kuyper or a mission of cultural engagement is being...
Warming wailing waning
Sometime Acton publications contributor and adjunct scholar Thomas Sieger Derr posts on the First Things blog under the title, “The End of the Global Warming Scare?” Derr identifies a trend that has not been ignored on this blog: increasingly vocal and widespread skepticism toward at least the most dire predictions emanating from the climate change disaster crowd. I would add to Derr’s observations that consternation over oil prices is likely to encourage reluctance to implement any costly programs that have...
Assumptions about the ‘Libertarian’ Jesus
Here’s the key assumption in Michael Gerson’s piece from last week, “The Libertarian Jesus”: passion cannot replace Medicaid or provide AIDS drugs to millions of people in Africa for the rest of their lives. In these cases, a role for government is necessary passionate — the expression of mitments to the general welfare and the value of every human life. passion certainly could do this, and much more. Private giving generally dwarfs government programs in both real dollars and effectiveness....
Looking for happiness, finding faith
Dr. Arthur C. Brooks spoke about “happiness” at an Acton Lecture Series event last week. Dr. Brooks, a professor of Business and Government Policy at Syracuse University and a visiting scholar with the American Enterprise Institute, presented evidence which suggests that religion is the greatest factor in general human happiness in the United States. Religion, argues Dr. Brooks, is essential to human flourishing in the United States and public secularism should be strongly guarded against by everyone – religious or...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved