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Trump Is Hopelessly Confused On Trade

Here’s a note to a new correspondent:

Mr. W__:

Thanks for your e-mail.

You write that “President Trump can be forgiven for thinking American trade deficits with Mexico and with Canada are signs of them taking advantage of us.  He’s a business man and no business man wants to see his company spending more than it earns.  I see where he’s coming from.”

With respect, I disagree. Trump’s business background arguably explains his hostility to U.S. trade deficits with the rest of the world – that is, with all other countries – but not with individual countries.

Many businesspeople falsely suppose that the American economy is a for-profit corporation that must turn a monetary profit, and that trade deficits with the rest of the world mean that America, Inc., is suffering losses rather than earning profits. Although profoundly mistaken, this notion is one that an economically ill-tutored businessperson easily falls for.

But no competent businessperson believes that every supplier to his or her firm should purchase from that firm at least as much as that firm purchases from them. Boeing’s CEO would lose his job immediately if he threatened to have Boeing stop doing business with any Boeing supplier – including each of its workers – who does not commit to buying from Boeing at least as much as Boeing buys from that supplier. Yet Trump’s complaint about the U.S. having a trade deficit with Canada, Mexico, and other individual countries is the equivalent of this imaginary destructive stupidity by Boeing’s CEO.

Just as no business expects to have “balanced trade” (and much less a “trade surplus”) with every individual supplier, even if we for a moment embrace the mercantilist fallacy that a national economy is a for-profit corporation, no country (in our world of more than two countries) should expect to have “balanced trade” (or a “trade surplus”) with every individual country. That Trump thinks otherwise is perhaps the most devastating evidence yet of his utter ignorance of the economics of trade.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

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Some Links

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal rightly criticizes “the Trump tariff roller coaster.” Three slices:

President Trump gave a one-month tariff reprieve to auto makers on Wednesday, a day after his 25% tax on imports from Mexico and Canada took effect. Everyone else will still pay. Welcome to the Trump tariff thrill ride, where you never know what’s going to happen next.

…..

The exemption may also be less than meets the eye. According to the White House statement, the exemption will apply to cars imported from Mexico and Canada. That means manufacturers could still get whacked with tariffs on parts and materials that cross the border, which could add thousands of dollars to the cost of each vehicle.

Manufacturers that assemble cars in North America would still be at a competitive disadvantage. Mr. Trump said in his speech to Congress Tuesday that his policies would allow “our auto industry to absolutely boom.” Executives, investors and dealers beg to differ. General Motors stock is down 11.9% since Mr. Trump’s election while Ford Motor’s is 13.5% lower.

…..

Mr. Trump originally justified the tariffs under an emergency law to combat the alleged threat of fentanyl. But he claimed Tuesday the tariffs are needed because “we pay subsidies to Canada and to Mexico of hundreds of billions of dollars” and have “very large deficits with both of them.”

That sounds like White House protectionist in chief Peter Navarro. He and his boss love tariffs for their own sake. Meanwhile, the tariff barrage is causing economic uncertainty and slowing investment—a real thrill a minute.

My GMU Econ colleague Vincent Geloso makes the case for a policy of unilateral free trade. A slice:

The first, and most famous, episode of unilateral liberalization was the abolishing of the tariffs (known as the Corn Laws) on all grain imported into Britain. The Corn Laws had the effect of keeping food prices in the UK 9% higher relative to world markets. Since food items were a major component of the budgets of the poor, the repeal of the tariffs was largely a “pro-poor” policy.

The repeal is such a momentous event in British history that some historians argue it “fixed in the minds of the British working class in particular, right up to the present day, the profound belief that free trade is good for the poor and the working man and woman” and that this is why “the lower middle class and the working class in Britain is and always has been solidly in favor of free trade.”

But Britain is far from the only case. Most of the trade liberalization of the 19th century was done unilaterally. Historically, there are multiple Canadian episodes of unilateral liberalization. More recent examples include Australia’s massive reduction of manufacturing tariffs starting in the 1980s and Switzerland’s 2024 abolition of all import taxes on industrial products regardless of origin.

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino understandably calls Trump’s statements about agricultural trade and tariffs “bizarre.”  Two slices:

The agricultural trade balance used to be a consistent surplus in the supposedly awful times when NAFTA was in effect and China was buying larger amounts of U.S. agricultural exports. In 2019, the year after Trump’s China tariffs took effect, the U.S. ran its first agricultural trade deficit since at least 2001.

The administration knew that the decline in exports that year was because of retaliatory tariffs, so it spent billions of taxpayer dollars bailing out farmers to make up for it.

…..

This is what “decoupling” from China looks like in practice in the agricultural sector. It means farmers get hammered. It means that the trading relationships built up in many cases by Republican governors of agricultural states get destroyed.

Maybe Trump thinks that’s for the greater good. There’s a case to be made that the agriculture sector, which is relatively small, is worth sacrificing for some geopolitical goal. Even in Iowa, a heavily agricultural state, farming accounts for 5.9 percent of GDP. That’s about the same proportion as retail trade. Manufacturing accounts for almost three times as much. Finance, insurance, and real estate account for almost four times as much.

For the country as a whole, farms accounted for less than 1 percent of GDP in 2023. If Trump wants to throw them under the bus for the sake of his trade war, maybe you could say that’s pro-American. But you can’t say it’s pro-farmer.

Trump is taking farmers for granted, saying he loves them while pursuing policies he knows will harm them. He probably thinks they mostly live in states Republicans win in elections anyway, and he’ll be happy to bail them out with your money for their loyalty.

Scott Lincicome explains that new Trump trade actions against lumber imports will raise prices for homebuilders (and, hence, for home buyers). A slice:

On March 1, President Trump instructed the Secretary of Commerce to initiate an investigation under Section 232 of the Trade Expansion Act of 1962 on the effects of imported timber, lumber, and their derivative products on US national security. This case follows an amended Section 232 action on steel and aluminum from early February and a new investigation of copper imports launched this week.

President Trump’s affinity for the law is nothing new. As Inu Manak and I documented in a 2021 Cato paper, Trump repeatedly invoked—and abused—Section 232 during his first term to initiate several investigations and to impose the aforementioned steel and aluminum tariffs on dubious grounds, raising a host of legal, economic, and procedural concerns along the way.

Trump’s new Section 232 action on wood products, however, ratchets up those concerns to a whole new level, in the process revealing many of the fundamental problems with the law that we first highlighted four years ago.

Most obviously, new tariffs or other import restrictions on lumber and other wood products would mean higher prices for those things in the US market—a particularly heavy burden for already-struggling American homebuilders and homebuyers.

Contrary to President Trump’s frequent assertions, Americans paid the tariffs he imposed in his first term, and research we commissioned in 2022 found that US “trade remedy” tariffs (i.e., anti-dumping and countervailing duties) on lumber and other construction materials lead to a persistent increase in their domestic prices—costs builders often passed on to homebuyers.

George Will highlights the unseriousness of MAGA. A slice:

Protectionism is another manifestation of Trump’s courage. He has plucked from the air a number — 25 percent seems to entrance him — as a properly muscular way to (in Rubioese) “stand up for” America with tariffs against two of its economic tormentors. MAGA means protecting America (2024 GDP: $29.16 trillion) from Canada ($2.21 trillion) and Mexico ($1.84 trillion).

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, writes wisely about DOGE and its critics. Here’s her conclusion:

Where does that leave us? With the same old truth that we must soon reform entitlement spending to make Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security sustainable. But we must also cut as much as possible of the absurd waste that infects the budget. Rather than endorsing a false choice, we, the people, should simply demand that Congress be the good steward of our tax dollars it was intended to be. Regardless of what DOGE does.

Chris Freiman makes the case against capping interest rates on credit cards.

John Stossel compares America’s economy to that of Europe.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from pages 270-271 of Jacob Viner’s 1968 International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences essay, “Mercantilist Thought,” as this essay is reprinted in the 1991 collection, edited by Douglas Irwin, Jacob Viner: Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics:

Most mercantilist measures involved a burden on some occupational or regional sectors of the population. Such sectors, without challenging the general objectives of mercantilism, would commonly resort to all the forms of pressure and persuasion available to them to obtain relaxation of the measures or a revision of them which would shift the burdens elsewhere. Thus, in England the graziers would press for a relaxation on the export of raw wool, and the independent merchants would protest vigorously against the special privileges granted to the trading companies. Even where absolute monarchy prevailed, governments found it necessary to make concessions to dissenting groups.

DBx: And, of course, so it goes today. This method of making policy is not only inconsistent with the rule of law, it encourages rent-seeking and heightens economic uncertainty. How distressing that so few of us seem to have learned much on this score over the past 300 years.

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Trumpian Tariff Fallacies

Here’s a letter to National Review:

Editor:

Reporting on Pres. Trump’s address last night to Congress, Brittany Bernstein and Audrey Fahlberg quote these lines from his speech (“‘We Have Been Ripped Off’: Trump Defends Sweeping Tariffs in Address to Congress as Trade Wars Kick Off,” March 4):

“We have been ripped off for decades by nearly every country on Earth and we will not let that happen any longer,” Trump said.

“Other countries have used tariffs against us for decades and now it’s our turn to start using them against those other countries,” he said, pointing to the European Union, China, Brazil, India, Mexico and Canada.

Unfortunately, Ms. Bernstein and Ms. Fahlberg missed the opportunity offered by Trump’s words to expose two foundational fallacies that surround his protectionism.

One fallacy is that tariffs are used against foreign countries. In fact, tariffs are used against the citizens of the government that imposes the tariffs. Canadian tariffs, for example, are taxes on Canadians’ purchases of imports, and U.S. tariffs are taxes on Americans’ purchases of imports. And so while foreign exporters do suffer when the U.S. government raises tariffs, the bulk of the suffering is by Americans – by American families who pay higher prices for food, clothing, and other household goods, and by American producers who pay higher prices for raw materials and intermediate products used in production here in the U.S.

Moreover, these higher prices at home are by design: U.S. tariffs will not cause American manufacturing and agricultural outputs to rise unless these tariffs increase the prices that Americans pay for these outputs. When Trump and other protectionists deny that Americans will pay higher prices as a result of tariffs, they are either lying or displaying frightening economic ignorance.

The second fallacy is the frequently heard excuse that Trump’s tariffs are bargaining chips to compel other governments to step up actions to stop the flow into America of illegal drugs. Yet last night, Trump himself identified other countries’ tariffs – which, again, ‘rip off,’ not Americans, but their own citizens – as the principal justification for his tariffs.

In short, Trump insists that, because other countries use tariffs to rip off their citizens, he’s going to use tariffs no less harshly to rip off Americans.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

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Bonus Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 268 of Jacob Viner’s 1968 International Encyclopedia of the Social Sciences essay, “Mercantilist Thought,” as this essay is reprinted in the 1991 collection, edited by Douglas Irwin, Jacob Viner: Essays on the Intellectual History of Economics:

If it was relative status that solely or mainly mattered, economic damage to a rival country could logically be treated as equivalent to economic benefit to one’s own country, and famine abroad, to bountiful harvests at home. Such reasoning abounds in the mercantilist literature, and it was moral or sentimental revulsion against it more than superior economic analysis which brought much of the late eighteenth-century Enlightenment to the support of free trade ideas.

DBx: Of course the reaction to mercantilism did also produce, in the second half of the 18th century, superior economic analysis, none better than that of Adam Smith.

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Although we were carelessly inaccurate in our political history – contrary to our claim, the Whigs did not go extinct after 1828 – the economic substance of Phil Gramm’s and my letter in today’s Wall Street Journal is indeed accurate: U.S. tariff rates fell – in fits and starts – in the 30 years from 1830 to 1860, and this period witnessed faster annual rates of growth in U.S. industrialization than did those periods in the 19th century when tariff rates were generally rising.

In an otherwise excellent column (“Trump’s Echo of 1829,” op-ed, Feb. 27) Karl Rove contends that President Andrew Jackson “presided over the ‘Tariff of Abominations.’” This requires some clarification.

The Tariff of Abominations was signed into law by John Quincy Adams in 1828. It was a major issue in that year’s election that swept Jackson and his new party, the Democratic Republicans, into power. Jackson supporters viewed the tariff as an elitist policy that benefited the few at the expense of the many.

That interpretation applies equally today. Not only did the Tariff of Abominations lead to a Whig party bloodbath; the election set the Whigs on a course to extinction. For the next 30 years, average tariff rates declined by 70% and America experienced an unprecedented period of industrialization. Immediately prior to the Civil War, the U.S. had one of the lowest average tariff rates in the world and a booming economy.

The lesson of the Tariff of Abominations, the ensuing Jackson landslide and the 30 years of rapid industrialization as tariffs plummeted is that such levies don’t produce prosperity or help win elections.

Phil Gramm and Prof. Donald Boudreaux
AEI and George Mason University
Helotes, Texas, and Fairfax, Va.

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Some Links

The Wall Street Journal‘s Editorial Board decries the Trump tariffs that “whack Trump voters.” Two slices:

President Trump won the Presidency a second time by promising working-class voters he’d lift their real incomes. Which makes it all the more puzzling that he’s so intent on imposing tariffs that will punish those same Americans.

Tariffs are taxes, and Mr. Trump’s latest tariffs are estimated to be about an annual $150 billion tax increase. Taxes are antigrowth. That’s the message investors are sending this week since Mr. Trump let his 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico take effect. The President also raised his 10% tariff on China by another 10%. Canada and China retaliated, while Mexico is holding off until Sunday.

The border taxes, and the uncertainty they bring, are weighing on growth and consumer confidence. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is down 3.4% since Mr. Trump took office, erasing the ebullient gains that followed his November election.

Brace for higher prices on berries, bell peppers, and, gulp, beer. Target CEO Brian Cornell told CNBC Tuesday that tariffs on Mexico may force the company to raise prices on fruits and vegetables. About 30% of vegetables and fresh fruit sold in the U.S. come from Mexico. Modelo’s Mexican-produced Especial is the best-selling beer in the U.S.

…..

The President also professes to love American farmers, but he apparently loves tariffs more. U.S. farmers are already being squeezed by low crop prices and inflation. The American Farm Bureau Federation (AFBF) says farmers are losing money on almost every major crop planted for the third straight year.

Tariffs will increase their pain. About 85% of the U.S. potash supply for fertilizer is imported from Canada. China is hitting U.S. farm exports with a 15% tariff, which will let farmers in Brazil and Australia grab market share. “Even more costs and reducing markets for American agricultural goods could create an economic burden some farmers may not be able to bear,” AFBF President Zippy Duvall said Tuesday.

Also decrying Trump’s destructive protectionism is the Editorial Board of the Washington Post. A slice:

To see how this works, consider the auto industry, the most integrated in North America. Thirty-eight percent of the value of cars imported from Mexico comes from parts and components made in the United States. Seventeen to 36 percent of the makeup of Cadillac models assembled in the United States is sourced in Mexico. Auto parts cross North American borders several times before ending up put together on a dealer’s lot. A 25 percent tariff would boost their price on every crossing, decimating the industry’s competitiveness.

Eric Boehm reports the distressing news that, despite the tariffs’ economic destructiveness, Trump promises even more of them.

At his Facebook page, Phil Magness identifies several pro-tariff factions within the Trump administration:

I see about 5-6 different pro-tariff factions in the higher levels of the Trump admin right now, all of which are oddly in conflict with each other on certain margins.

– Howard Lutnick (Commerce Secretary) seems to be the relative moderate protectionist who wants some combo of “strategic” protectionism and leverage on specific priority industries, but without tanking the stock market or the economy.

– Kevin Hassett (NEC) is a “pinch my nose and accept tariffs” nominal free trader who thinks that tariffs can be leveraged against bad actors abroad like China, and as a tool to deploy against currency manipulation.

– Stephen Miran (Coucil of Economic Advisors) is a “tariffs will replace the IRS!” kook, who believes that tariff incidence falls on foreign countries and that a 20%-ish overall tariff will optimize the revenue yield of the government.

– Wells King (Domestic Policy Council) is literally a 19th century mercantilist who thinks we can build a Henry Clay style wall around America and create an import-substitution scheme that forces domestic raw material providers into being the supply chains for domestic industries, irrespective of the world market (in practice this would basically amount to Peronism).

– JD Vance thinks tariffs are a tool in the culture war and wants to weaponize them against drug overdoses in Appalachia even though the policy mechanism for how that is supposed to work makes absolutely no sense, so instead he fabricates up conspiracy theories about a nonexistent fentanyl crisis at the Canadian border.

– Peter Navarro (special aid to Trump) is the craziest of them all and seems to be vacillating between extreme variations of all the other reasons listed above, including contradicting himself on a whim but never helping the situation.

The result is utter chaos and confusion, which manifests in the see-saw of tariff policy threats, reversals, executive orders, and public pronouncements that we’ve witnessed over the last month.

National Review‘s Charles Cooke notes that Congress can and should – but, sadly, won’t – end Trump’s “tariff madness” immediately. A slice:

The law that President Trump is using to cause such havoc is known as IEEPA. It’s supposed to be for emergencies, but, given that it gives the president free rein to determine when an emergency is in force, it’s effectively a non-justiciable enabling act. Congress can repeal it, amend it, or pass a separate law that supersedes it, and there’s nothing that anybody can do to stop it. Such a law could exempt Canada and Mexico from its provisions, or make clear that other tariff deals involving those countries (like the one Trump signed in 2019) have precedence, or do anything else that Congress wants it to do, because — again! — Congress has plenary power over tariffs. Heck, if Congress passed a law that simply read, “All delegation of the legislature’s Article I, Section 8 tariff powers is hereby rescinded,” that would immediately be the law of the land.

I understand that Congress does not want to do this because, despite their protestations when their guy is out of power, both parties like the imperial presidency. But that approach is dumb, shortsighted, and, in this case, obviously illegal under a plain reading of the Constitution.

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino predicts that Trump apologists will soon mimic Biden apologists by calling  the rise in prices suffered by consumers ‘greedflation.’ A slice:

But now, some Republicans are probably going to make their own version of the argument that corporations are to blame for higher prices. Trump’s promises of tariffs have consistently been accompanied by assurances that prices will not rise because foreign corporations will lower prices to retain market access. This is unlikely to actually happen, at which point Republicans will blame those corporations and maybe even American corporations for passing the cost of the tax along to consumers.

For example, Secretary of the Treasury Scott Bessent said that China will “eat any tariffs that go on.” The idea is that China’s exports to the U.S. are so valuable that Chinese companies would cut their prices to keep the after-tariff price the same as the pre-tariff price. That way, Americans would keep buying Chinese products, and the Chinese companies would effectively bear the burden of the tax.

This could be true in theory, but we know from experience this is not how the China tariffs worked last time. Nearly the entire cost of the tax was passed on to Americans. China retaliated with tariffs of its own, hurting American exporters. Both countries were made worse off.

(As an aside, it’s worth noting that if Bessent’s theory does play out as he says, then the tariffs would serve little protective purpose for U.S. industries. If China “eats” the tariffs, then Americans would keep buying Chinese goods at the same prices they did before the tariffs went into place. With tariffs, there’s always a catch.)

This time around, China has already announced retaliatory tariffs on American agricultural products. It has also brought a case against the U.S. through the World Trade Organization, indicating that it is not content to cut prices in response. Canada, too, has announced retaliatory tariffs.

When Americans start to feel the higher costs from the goods affected by tariffs, and start to wonder why American exporters are being harmed by supposedly pro-export policies, the temptation will be very strong for Republicans to blame the corporations for not doing what they wanted.

Joe Lancaster is correct: “Trump Loves Tariffs. Fentanyl Is Just an Excuse.” A slice:

Indeed, if the tariffs are primarily intended to halt fentanyl, then it’s strange to include Canada in the first place.

Of the 7,793 pounds of fentanyl seized in the U.S. since September, the BBC reports, citing U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistics, 98 percent “was intercepted at the southwest border with Mexico. Less than 1% was seized across the northern US border with Canada. The remainder was from sea routes or other US checkpoints.”

My Mercatus Center colleague Jack Salmon explains that the Trump administration “cares a lot about the wrong deficit.” A slice:

If the administration genuinely wanted to improve America’s economic future, it would focus on reducing the fiscal deficit, not the trade deficit. The path to a sustainable economy does not lie in restricting imports or attempting to “win” at trade through tariffs and protectionism. Reducing the trade deficit is not achieved by forcing foreign competitors to buy more U.S. goods; it requires fostering a higher domestic savings rate, including higher government savings. The only meaningful way to shrink the trade deficit without distorting markets is for the United States to save more and borrow less. This means controlling federal spending, reforming entitlements, deregulating, and moving towards a simplified tax structure with lower rates and broader bases.

Rightly applauding spending cuts announced by Trump, Christian Britschgi also rightly complains that these cuts are smaller than the new spending.

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Quotation of the Day…

is from page vii of the late Kenneth Minogue’s 1999 “Preface to the Liberty Fund Edition” of his 1963 book, The Liberal Mind:

As the liberal mind came to dominate Western culture, it turned out to be marvelously fertile in discovering more and more abstract classes of people constituted by their pain, people whom “we” had treated badly. These included not only the poor, but also indigenous peoples, women, victims of child abuse, gays, the disabled – indeed, potentially just about everybody except healthy heterosexual white males.

DBx: Yep.

Minogue immediately explains that he is here not denying wrongdoing by we Westerners or that some people have been unjustly discriminated against and harmed. His point, instead, is that liberalism metastasized in many minds into an illiberal project of exaggerating harm where it did exist, and even imagining it where it didn’t exist, in order to create abstract groups of victims who allegedly require salvation by these new ‘liberals.’ As Minogue writes  later (page ix) of this 1999 Preface – writes about what is more accurately today called the progressive mind – “the politics of the liberal mind is a melodrama of oppressors and victims.”

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Say What?

Here’s a letter to City Journal.

Editor:

The usually sound Joshua Hendrickson’s attempt at “making sense of the Trump tariffs” makes no sense (“Making Sense of the Trump Tariffs,” March 3). It’s filled with factual and logical fallacies.

Start with the fact that trade has not, contrary to Prof. Hendrickson’s assertion, “hollowed out America’s industrial base.” One expects protectionist pundits and politicians to ignore reality by repeating this convenient yet false sound bite, but one also expects a professional economist to know better – to know, for example, that U.S. industrial capacity is today at an all-time high, as is U.S. manufacturing value-added.

Prof. Hendrickson also mistakenly says that, because of the dollar’s role as a global reserve currency, it “tends to be overvalued.” No it doesn’t. Foreigners demand dollars for use in international commerce precisely because the dollar is especially valuable in this role. The value of the dollar reflects its utility as a global reserve currency – a valuable service that we Americans currently have a comparative advantage at supplying. Saying that the dollar is overvalued because foreigners have a high demand for dollars makes no more sense than saying that gold is overvalued because people have a high demand for gold – because people demand gold not only as jewelry but also as an investment instrument.

Nor is it true that foreigners’ high demand for dollars causes them to specialize at producing outputs for which they have no comparative advantage. That Prof. Hendrickson suggests otherwise is, frankly, inexplicable. It’s true that the dollar’s role as a global reserve currency reduces Americans’ costs of acquiring foreign goods. But not only is this reality a benefit to Americans rather than a cost, it does nothing either to prompt foreigners to specialize in producing for sale to Americans outputs that we Americans can produce for ourselves at lower costs, or to prompt Americans to pay to foreigners higher prices for outputs that we can produce for ourselves at lower costs.

Donald Trump has for four decades proudly embraced protectionism as he has displayed his utter ignorance of the economics of trade. There is no reason to believe that his current protectionist policies – policies completely consistent with his long-expressed ignorance – are anything other than raw, unalloyed protectionism.

Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
and
Martha and Nelson Getchell Chair for the Study of Free Market Capitalism at the Mercatus Center
George Mason University
Fairfax, VA 22030

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Some Links

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal rightly criticizes what it calls Trump’s “dumbest tariff plunge.” A slice:

But Mr. Trump wants tariffs for their own sake, which he says will usher in a new golden age.

We’ve courted Mr. Trump’s ire by calling the Mexico and Canada levies the “dumbest” in history, and we may have understated the point. Mr. Trump is whacking friends, not adversaries. His taxes will hit every cross-border transaction, and the North American vehicle market is so interconnected that some cars cross a border as many as eight times as they’re assembled.

Mr. Trump also objected when we reported an analysis by the Anderson Economic Group that the 25% tariff will raise the cost of a full-sized SUV assembled in North America by $9,000 and a pickup truck by $8,000. Is this how the new Republican Party plans on helping working-class voters?

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino offers his sensible predictions about the consequences of Trump’s tariffs punitive taxes on Americans who purchase imports. A slice:

• Negligible effect on the inflation rate, as measured by the CPI index or the PCE index. If inflation doesn’t budge, expect a bunch of Trump boosters to try to say they told you so, when in reality, we wouldn’t expect tariffs to have much of an effect on the economy-wide inflation rate. Tariffs make imports more expensive, which will result in less spending elsewhere in the economy. Tariffs do not increase the money supply, so we wouldn’t expect them to have a big impact on inflation.

• Higher prices for the goods to which the tariffs apply. Foreign businesses will mostly not compensate for the tax increase by lowering prices, as the Trump administration claims they will. The tax will be passed on to American consumers and businesses, as it was during Trump’s first term. Because Canada and Mexico are among the top buyers of U.S. petroleum products and sellers of U.S. crude oil imports, expect energy markets to be thrown into a tizzy if energy products are not excluded.

Erica York puts the (huge) size of Trump’s new tariffs taxes on American consumers and businesses in historical perspective.

National Review‘s Andrew Stuttaford isn’t impressed with Trump’s “tariff magic.” A slice:

The economic logic behind these tariffs being imposed on our two closest neighbors is, uh, questionable, and the geopolitical consequences are not likely to be that great either. The chances of Mark Carney, green zealot and Davos man par excellence, winning the next Canadian election just went up another notch.

Trump has started a trade war.

Warren Buffett calls tariffs ‘an act of war’.”

The Atlanta Fed is pessimistic about near-term economic growth.

Scott Lincicome, at X, nicely summarizes Trumpian hypocrisy – and political recklessness – about U.S. tariffs taxes on American consumers and businesses:

2024: BIDENFLATION IS DESTROYING AMERICA
2O25: so prices increase whatever it’s fine

Cato’s Clark Packard and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon decry the U.S. steel industry’s long and harmful dependence on protection by U.S. tariffs. Two slices:

For nearly 60 years, the United States steel industry has been one of the most protected sectors of the American economy. Policymakers have showered an unsavory mix of trade restrictions to benefit domestic steel firms including quotas, tariffs, aggressive trade remedies, and procurement preferences. With the Trump administration promising a new onslaught of protectionism, steel prices are rising even before the tariffs are implemented. As always, consumers will pay the price.

In 2018, the first Trump administration imposed 25 percent “national security” tariffs on steel imported from virtually every country in the world in a bid to boost domestic steel output (despite the Secretary of Defense noting at the time that the military only needed 3 percent of domestic steel production). Those tariffs imposed significant costs on the American economy.

…..

To be sure, there was no mystery before the recent steel tariffs announcement that they would harm domestic manufacturing and other steel-consuming industries. Multiple economic studies, including a US International Trade Commission report calculating the tariffs’ disproportionate costs to the manufacturing, construction, and energy sectors, clearly show that this has been the case ever since the tariffs were first imposed in 2018.

Moreover, as some of these studies also indicate, steel-consuming industries employ at least 46 times more workers than those employed in domestic manufacturing, so far more Americans stand to be hurt than helped by the tariffs. If President Trump is truly interested in boosting American manufacturing, fueling the long-running price disparity between US and global steel prices through misguided and demonstrably ineffective tariffs is not the way to do it.

Scott Atlas, writing in the Wall Street Journal, argues that “America still needs a covid reckoning.” Two slices:

The mismanagement of the pandemic hit us personally and exposed a massive, across-the-board institutional failure. It was the most tragic breakdown of leadership and ethics that free societies have seen in our lifetimes.

…..

Especially in the U.S.—where the Declaration of Independence proclaims that all men are “endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights”—it is stunning that liberty fell so quickly and thoroughly by government decree and with public assent.

Why did free people accept Draconian and illogical lockdowns? The answer reveals the reason for the silence on the pandemic. Censorship and propaganda are part of the explanation, tools of control that convinced the public of two lies—that there was a consensus of experts in favor of lockdowns, and that dissent from that false consensus was dangerous.

Yet that alone doesn’t explain today’s silence about that extraordinary collapse. It is also that so many smart and influential people were complicit. They bought into and even advocated irrational measures that defied data, biology and common sense. That acquiescence—frankly, cowardice—and the failure to grasp reality are inconvenient truths that, understandably, no one wants to revisit.

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