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World News See other World News Articles Title: Mr. Tariff Ups the Ante on China Donald Trump just jumped the shark calling himself, Mr. Tariff. He believes a trade deficit is akin to stealing the wealth of a nation. It isnt. Under normal conditions a trade deficit is simply a reflection of the difference in comparative advantage of one countrys workers over anothers. And the value of the currency is supposed to rise and fall to offset that state of affairs over time. Donald Trump has, in the words of David Stockman, A 17th century view on global trade. It is one born of a complete misunderstanding of how and why trade imbalances occur, why they will re-balance if allowed and why, ultimately, they are irrelevant. But, Trump cant or wont see it that way. He refuses to accept that we are the creators of our persistent trade deficit with China. That the trade deficit stems from running budget deficits and applying Keynesian counter-cyclical monetary policy or, worse, QE to protect domestic asset prices. It also stems from our being the worlds reserve currency which places an insane demand on the Fed to keep the flow of dollars rising to liquefy global trade. He complains that international tariffs regimes are unfair. But, as Stockman has consistently pointed out tariff levels globally are nearly non-existent running at around 3% on average. This is the period of freest trade weve seen in the era of the modern nation state, but Trump looks at these niggling things, these small things and cant see the forest for them. Mr. Inflexible It speaks of ideological possession on the subject. It speaks to inflexibility of mind. Germany taxes our cars too high, slap a tariff on them. Hes obsessed with German car exports. Germans dont buy GMs because they are shitty cars, not because they are more expensive. A level playing field wont help a company handed over to the UAW, stiffing the bondholders, and run by morons. The only reason GM still functions is because they make bad cars to sell to people who cant afford a good car and patriots who buy Silverados instead of F-150s. Canada wont buy our milk,slap on tariffs and threaten NAFTA, cries Mr. Tariff. Not that NAFTA shouldnt just be abolished completely, but whatever, Trump doesnt believe in free trade, he believes in extortive trade because, Merica First. If China wont import our oil but buys Irans instead, then they are our enemy then we sanction them and extort higher imports of it. Its all childish and immoral in a way that is, frankly, embarrassing to anyone with three working brain cells to rub together and make a spark. But, the real undercurrent in all of this is Trumps obsession with China stealing our technology and leap-frogging the U.S. as a technology leader. Which way on Huawei? And thats why Huaweis CFO was arrested in Canada while Trump was negotiating with Chinese Premier Xi Jinping over the weekend over the company violating U.S. sanctions on Iran. Leaving aside the pure insanity of Canada arresting a Chinese national for her company violating U.S. sanctions on Iran which China was not a party to, this is a dangerous escalation by the U.S. over what is, essentially, something that is ultimately not enforceable, U.S. technology licensing. Its simply bullying. But, since Trump is a bully, what else is new? But, the real issue here is that, in very short order, Huawei has become a global leader in 5G infrastructure technology which the U.S. is falling behind on. And now with this arrest Trump is betting that he can scare everyone else into not buying their superior products through the ruinous application of sanctions policies. The West has been systematically cutting Huawei out of the global 5G rollout because of security concerns. More like profit concerns. It is, simply, typical protectionism by Mr. Tariff himself. And hes made no bones about any of this. Trump has stated quite emphatically that all a policy has to do is pass his America First sniff test and itll get implemented. And since hes not a deep thinker, all he cares about are first-order effects and how he can sell it on his Twitter feed to his now brain-dead base who believes all of this China hacked muh everything narrative were being inundated with all of a sudden. Trump knows that now Chinas tech industry isnt just the manufacturing arm of U.S. multinationals. Were staring at equivalence in a lot of areas. And the rate of catch up China is playing in this arena is threatening our long-term competitiveness. Hence going after Huawei, a phenomenal success story, and ZTE. While Apple focuses on tactical things like end-user products phones, watches, and media services Huawei started there, creating homegrown Chinese variants of the iPhone and built a company focused on the future of communications infrastructure, 5G, with the end-user product the face of the company to build Apple-like brand loyalty in China. This is the public face of the future trade war. Will Americans continue buying, say, iPhones and watches over their Chinese knock-off counterparts at half the price? Flow not Stock, Don So, I understand completely Trumps problem with the current situation and the past that led to this state of affairs. What I disagree with is the magic of tariffs to reverse the flow of capital out of the country. Hes taken some steps in the right direction tax cuts, tax amnesty for repatriating offshore corporate profits, lowering certain regulations but thats not nearly enough. It cant and wont solve the real problem of the expense of doing business in the U.S. His critics on the left are right that a lot of those tax breaks didnt go to fund new sustainable growth and that a lot of it went to fuel buybacks and pay dividends. But they miss the reason why, it isnt because Trump wanted to repay his corporate overlords, its because idiotic leftist policy inertia and insane monetary policy has kept the cost of business expansion higher than protecting the corporate balance sheet or returning the money to shareholders. His $1 trillion per year deficit, itself a source of the trade imbalance with China, will explode now that his growth story is dying, emerging markets are starved for dollars, supply chains are freezing up because of the U.S.s increasingly erratic behavior and debt levels around the world choking out growth. Trump wants a weaker dollar, and for a little while he may get it as the market misreads whats happening here. Any Fed dovishness will be seen as dollar negative versus being globally accommodative to worsening economic conditions amplifying debt servicing costs. His classic mercantilist mindset will applaud this and it might abate the worsening trade deficit numbers for a time, but it wont change the trend against him regardless of the Fed raising rates or not in 2019. The world economy is deflating and Trumps tariffs, arrests and sanctions only tell people that capital is not welcome in the U.S. His only saving grace in 2019 is that the leadership in Europe is even dumber on these issues than he is. The consumer is ultimately sovereign. Its their money and its their time. If you are so arrogant as to believe you are indispensable to your customers you will find out very quickly what they think of that. And customers of the U.S. dollar are rapidly coming to the conclusion that the cost of doing business in it is too high. In the game of global capital you dont have to be good, you just have to treat it slightly better than everyone else to see the inflows come your way. Trump is alienating everyone and ensuring that companies like Huawei find ways to never do business with the U.S. ever again. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: Ada (#0)
I like Lew Rockwell, and of course Ron Paul also, but on this one subject, I disagree with both. The above theory is predicated on the assumption that no special regard is placed on any one nation's currency. But that is clearly not the case in the US dollar. It is the "reserve currency of the world" so it creates artificial worldwide demand for the USD. This prevents the USD from "rebalancing" and indeed, is highlighted by the fact that it's never happened in all the years that the US has had a severe trade deficit. If the entire world money supply was on a gold standard, then it would be okay to run such deficits because it would lead to a shortage of gold and deflation for domestic purchases in the country which has the trade deficit, and that would stem the flow of imports because domestic goods would become cheaper. THAT seems to be the scenario upon which the "rebalancing" theory above is based, but of course we are not on a gold standard. We are instead on a standard that allows the USA to print as much fiat money as the foreign world demands, and they are still demanding it even after generations of running a trade deficit.
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