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Texas Tech economist (and GMU Econ alum) Ben Powell explains that “tariffs on China shrink the U.S. economy, and vice versa.” A slice:

China was just emerging as a major trading partner in the global economy 30 years ago. The United States imported only $48.5 billion in Chinese goods in 1995. Today we import $439 billion from China. This growth has enriched both countries.

Economists have understood for more than 200 years that trade flows between nations according to “comparative advantage”: each country produces what it can make relatively more efficiently. This results in a larger economic pie for both countries, which translates into better living standards for ordinary people.

Toys and furniture are two of the largest categories of consumer imports from China. Toy prices are down 87.5 percent since 1995, and furniture prices are essentially unchanged. Televisions and apparel are two other popular categories of imports. Since 1995, television prices are down 98.5 percent and apparel prices are unchanged. Meanwhile, the overall consumer price index has increased by 111 percent.

The lowered cost of production associated with Chinese trade is a major reason these prices have decreased relative to inflation. That translates into a real wage increase since ordinary Americans can afford to buy more. Meanwhile, increased imports haven’t shrunk the number of jobs for Americans. Total civilian employment has grown from 132 million in 1995 to 170 million today.

International trade doesn’t change the number of jobs in the U.S. economy. It changes the mix of jobs.  We tend to lose low-wage, low-productivity jobs and gain high-wage, high-productivity jobs. Trade restrictions might shift some low-wage jobs back to the United States, but does anyone really think America becomes better off by bringing back Chinese sweatshop jobs?

While we would become poorer if we brought back sweatshop jobs, these same jobs are a step up for Chinese citizens. In my recent book, Out of Poverty: Sweatshops in the Global Economy, I investigated the wages of workers in factories deemed Chinese sweatshops.  The average sweatshop worker earned nearly $14 a day between 2010 and 2019. During this time, roughly 20 percent of China’s population lived on less than $6.85 per day.

Writing in the Washington Post, Eric Boehm warns us not to be surprised if Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs “are here to stay.” Two slices:

At the height of a brief trade war with Europe in the 1960s, President Lyndon B. Johnson imposed a 25 percent tariff on imported passenger trucks and vans. It was a retaliatory measure aimed at punishing European countries — France and West Germany, mostly — for tariffs they had slapped on American chicken.

That trade war ended long ago, but that 25 percent tariff on pickup trucks and cargo vans remains to this day. In practice, the “chicken tax” makes imported vehicles more expensive. But that’s not all. It also limits American consumers’ choices. The Toyota Hilux, for example, is one of the most popular pickup trucks in the world but is not sold in the United States. The tariff is also part of the reason American-made pickup trucks are so pricey: U.S. car companies can charge more because they face less competition.

…..

In theory, the sweeping tariffs Trump has imposed this year should be easier to dislodge. They’re so broad that they create fewer industry-specific beneficiaries to lobby for their continuation, and they could be canceled with an executive order rather than requiring an act of Congress. The fact that the public “is very aware of the new tariffs and so far has taken a pretty strong negative view of them” could give a future Democratic president or congressional majority the necessary push to scrap them, [Ed] Gresser added.

But the very nature of the political system could help them hang around — if the courts don’t strike them down, that is. Expansions of presidential power are typically taken for granted by later presidents, who in this case might find it tempting to keep using unilateral tariffs to influence domestic politics and international affairs.

Marc Wheat understandably wonders why Trump is imposing tariffs on American imports from Israel. Two slices:

The Framers repeatedly and explicitly warned of the dangers inherent in allowing the executive to usurp legislative power. The American Revolution was fought, in part, over the indignity of “taxation without representation.” In response, the Constitution they ratified vested “all legislative Powers” of the national government “in a Congress of the United States.” Among those powers, first and foremost, was the power to tax.

This principle has served the nation well. In 1985, Congress passed the U.S.-Israel Free Trade Agreement, recognizing that free exchange between close allies served both nations’ interests. Since then, U.S. exports to Israel have surged by nearly 500 percent and the U.S. has become Israel’s largest export market. By 2024, Israeli tariffs on U.S. goods were already close to zero, and this past April, Israel eliminated its remaining import duties on American products. Similarly, before the Trump administration’s embrace of broad baseline tariffs, Americans paid a minuscule 0.05 percent tariff on goods imported from Israel.

…..

Congress should immediately reassert its constitutional role in matters of taxation and trade to ensure that decisions of this magnitude are made through the representative process the Framers intended. If Congress fails to do so, the precedent set will invite future presidents of either party to bypass the people’s representatives whenever it suits them.

Scott Lincicome shares this line from a Reuters report:

“Industrial machinery makers are being battered by steeper costs from U.S. President Donald Trump’s sweeping tariffs…. Caterpillar and Deere, both sector bellwethers, have flagged hefty tariff-related hits this year, most of which they expect to absorb”

Writing about tax cuts, David Henderson makes this observation about the media:

Surprisingly, reporters for the Wall Street Journal last week pointed out that the lowest income quintile received the largest percentage decrease in taxes. Why do I say surprisingly? Isn’t the Wall Street Journal the kind of newspaper that, of course, would point that out? The editorial page, certainly. But not the news pages. I’ve read the Journal multiple times a week for 52 years and I’ve always noticed the split between the conservative/sometimes libertarian editorial page and the left-of-center news pages. Indeed, the UCLA economist and now George Mason University economist Tim Groseclose established in his 2011 book, Left Turn: How Liberal Media Bias Distorts the American Mind, that WSJ reporters are among the most left-wing of all reporters for the major media. I reviewed his book here and briefly cited his evidence about the Journal.

The French are not cool. A slice:

Most of France has been sweltering under a heat wave this week, so naturally air conditioning has become the latest flash point in climate politics. The climate scolds want to prod the public into adopting what they call “energy sobriety,” and the French are discovering that in practice this means less AC.

This summer the French government suggested air conditioning should be used mainly by those “who are very sensitive to heat (elderly people, etc.),” or who can’t open the window at night because it’s too loud outside. The advisory urges the rest of the public to opt for a fan instead, draw the blinds, and limit heat emissions from ovens, computers and game consoles.

The government added that if you must use AC, don’t set it below 78 degrees Fahrenheit, and air condition only one room. While it may be “tempting to set your air conditioning to a very cool temperature to cool down quickly,” the French state said that’s a green faux pas that “results in excess electricity consumption.”

That suggestion may become a mandate. The European Union has issued a goal of net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, and this year France issued one of its periodic plansfor getting there. The report envisions “intelligent building control systems” that ensure nobody’s setting the temperature lower than authorities want.

Autumn Billings writes about post-Katrina New Orleans.

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Quotation of the Day…

is from pages 12-13 of the late E.G. West’s 1976 book, Adam Smith: The Man and His Works:

It was not only the American and French political revolutions, but also the revolution in commercial and economic thinking which put an end to the remnants of medieval society. Smith’s contribution to this thinking was decisive. His treatise of 1776 struck a mighty blow at the trade walls which had been erected around the nation states of Europe by the traditional protectionist or mercantilist politicians. In particular, the belief of many of the latter that one nation could become richer one if a rival became poorer was subjected o an especially devastating assault.

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The Rust Belt Wasn’t Done In By Economic Competition

Here’s a letter to a new correspondent.

Mr. K__:

You write:

Life is much more than money.  It is community, stability, family and neighbors.  Who cares if tariffs slow economic growth or even stop it?  If they fortify communities they are worthwhile.  Period and end of story.  The rust belt stands as a warning against “free trade” given how it was destroyed by blind veneration of Milton Friedman economics.  I only hope that Pres. Trump’s tariffs are in time to salvage what remains of America.

With respect, I disagree.

First, your complaint isn’t ultimately about trade; it’s about economic growth and change. International trade is only one source of such growth and change. Growth and change occur whenever new technologies are introduced – whenever people’s tastes change – whenever new raw materials are discovered – whenever population expands and sparks new types of labor specialization. Do you really want the government to try to freeze in place all existing patterns of economic activity so that no one suffers the discomfort of change?

And do you think it to have been a mistake that the government in 1925 didn’t impose the draconian measures that would have been necessary to attempt to preserve 1925-vintage economic activities and jobs? Had it successfully done so, the half of our households in 2025 that would have an automobile would drive the equivalent of Model T Fords. A quarter of us would toil on farms and ranches. Half of us would live in households without electricity and indoor plumbing, two-thirds of us would not have telephones, 80 percent of us wouldn’t have radios, and nearly all of us would be without air-conditioning. None of us would have access to antibiotics and the surgeries that antibiotics make possible.

Our life expectancy would be more than 20 years shorter.

What gives us the right today to deny not only to each other, but to our children and grandchildren, the fruits of economic growth that we today take for granted and – I’m quite confident – that even you would be desperate to recover if they were stripped away from you?

Second, your assessment of the fate of the rust belt, while common, is mistaken. As the economist Lee Ohanian found in a 2014 study,

the decline of the heavy manufacturing industry in the American “Rust Belt” is often thought to have begun in the late 1970s, when the United States suffered a significant recession. But theory suggests, and data support, that the Rust Belt’s decline started in the 1950s when the region’s dominant industries faced virtually no product or labor competition and therefore had little incentive to innovate or become more productive.

The rust-belt’s  problems were caused not by its industries’ and workers’ confrontation with economic competition but, instead, from their insulation from competition – the same sort of insulation that you now wish the government to impose nationwide. Far from fortifying communities, the tariffs that you and Pres. Trump champion will undermine them and impoverish us all.

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

UPDATE: Thanks to Jon Murphy for reminding me of this superb 2025 study by Jeremy Horpedahl that shows that the rust belt is now doing pretty well.

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Some Links

China is ruled by thugs – thugs whose imprisonment of Jimmy Lai is inexcusable. A slice:

Closing arguments in the year-long trial of Jimmy Lai were postponed again Friday until he can be fitted with a heart monitor. The 77-year-old publisher has been jailed for nearly five years, most of it in solitary confinement and wretched heat, and Reporters Without Borders says his health is declining in Stanley prison.

Though Hong Kong’s authorities have spent more than a year trying to document the supposedly nefarious activities he is accused of against the Hong Kong and Chinese governments, all they have proven is that he was an energetic newspaperman.

Hong Kong was once known for its rule of law and free press. But China has imposed a national-security law on the territory that it has used to shut down criticism and toss critics in jail. Its harsh treatment of Mr. Lai has turned the local businessman into the world’s most famous imprisoned champion of freedom.

Iain Murray explains that even Alexander Hamilton, were he alive, would object to Trump’s trade ‘policy.’ A slice:

A President declaring a “national emergency” over a trade imbalance or overcapacity in foreign markets, leading to his imposing taxes on Americans without Congressional deliberation or scrutiny, and possibly gifting him a massive pool of funds he could use for patronage, is exactly the sort of thing the Constitution was designed to prevent. It violates the separation of powers, eludes democratic accountability, and fits the pattern of emergency overreach our Founders repeatedly warned against throughout the constitutional debates. Even the biggest fan of an energetic executive, Alexander Hamilton, wanted to make sure that most of these powers remained firmly under Congressional control.

Indeed, Hamilton, supposedly the father figure of American protectionism, made many of the same arguments that free market economists make today about the abuse of tariffs as a revenue source. In the aforementioned Federalist 35, Hamilton says explicitly that “the consumer is the payer,” recognizing that the tax burden falls not on the foreign exporter, but on the American consumer. Indeed, this is why he recognizes that tariffs cannot be the only source of revenue for the federal government, as their burden would fall inequitably on the poor.

David Henderson wisely recommends reading a recent interview with the economist Anne Krueger. A slice:

Industrial Espionage Goes Both Ways

KRUEGER: Let me answer half a question you didn’t ask: the Chinese have on occasion tried very hard, I think, to oblige [the United States]. And I think we have missed the signal completely. I think their system is not a good system, and I think they themselves are not quite capable of understanding why it is not a good system, but this idea that they’re always stealing from us, that we never steal from them is silly. I mean, the idea that there’s no industrial espionage in this country! When I was in Silicon Valley, nobody would send a piece of equipment to any of the electronics fairs, even the big one in Las Vegas, without making sure there was some employee 24 hours a day watching the machinery to make sure nobody could reverse-engineer it. Now we’re so mad at the Chinese that they tried to do the same thing. Meanwhile, we’ve had more than one CIA agent arrested [in China] and pretty much caught dead to rights.

Why “Market Failures” Are Not Enough of an Argument for Government Intervention

KRUEGER: Some of these arguments about the market assume that if there are market failures, then whatever the government will do will be better. Maybe the market failures are huge, but that does not persuade me that government failures will not automatically be as huge. That’s the part that’s wrong. I still think that when you’re talking about lots of economic activities, you want to just look at incentives. If there’s something wrong with the market, get the incentives right. Giving bureaucrats the incentive to regulate is not the incentive that will work best in most cases.

Scott Lincicome and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon rightly plead for people to stop calling Trump’s tariffs “reciprocal.” A slice:

You may be (but since you’re reading this, probably aren’t) surprised to learn that there’s nothing “reciprocal” about these “reciprocal tariffs.” In fact, the Trump administration’s new tariff regime,

  • Only once matches new US tariffs to other countries’ tariffs (and rarely even gets close to such a match);
  • In the vast majority of cases—and for all major US import sources and free trade agreement (FTA) partners—sets US tariffs at rates much higher than those foreign governments apply to American goods; and
  • Whether intentionally or not, actually tends to impose higher tariffs on countries with lower tariffs on US exports.

GMU Econ alum Jon Murphy explains the new U.S.-Japan trade ‘deal’ fails even according to Trump’s mercantilist criteria.

National Review‘s Noah Rothman is understandably appalled by the Trump administration’s “private sector shakedown.” A slice:

The Wall Street Journal’s reporters summoned every ounce of their capacity for professional understatement when they called the Trump administration’s demand to recoup 15 percent of the profits derived from the sale of sophisticated electronics to the Chinese “unusual.”

That’s one way to describe the federal government shaking down private companies for a vig in exchange for unlocking the formerly restricted sale of sensitive components and resources with military applications to a great-power rival. A less charitable observer might call it a racket.

The maneuver is an extraordinary intervention into the private economy in ways that expand the remit of the president. It’s also an abdication of the commander in chief’s conventional obligation to preserve U.S. national security. Not that the American targets of Trump’s squeeze seemed to mind. Both Nvidia and Advanced Micro Devices were more than happy to kick a taste up to the big boss if it restored their access to the lucrative Chinese market. They’re not alone.

Arnold Kling offers a theory of recessions.

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Here’s a letter to The Hill.

Editor:

Caroline Freund’s defense of tariffs features at least two significant errors (“How Trump’s tariffs could actually work,” August 15).

Her first mistake is to claim that “economists prefer free trade because it is the best policy for global welfare.” This claim is misleading. While it’s true that economists recognize that the freer is trade the greater is global welfare, the core case for free trade is that it’s a boon to the home country. Pick up any economic textbook – or any other defense of free trade by competent economists from Adam Smith to Jagdish Bhagwati, from David Ricardo to Douglas Irwin, from Frédéric Bastiat to Arvind Panagariya – and you’ll find that the authors emphasize that, contrary to the assertions of protectionists, free trade enriches the home country regardless of other countries’ economic policies.

It is simply untrue that the case for free trade is one in which the economic welfare of the home country is sacrificed in order to increase the welfare of foreigners.

Ms. Freund’s second error is to assume that the large size and wealth of the U.S. market makes it so desirable to foreign producers that they are willing to pay to retain access to this market by absorbing the costs of high U.S. tariffs, an absorption that would show up as falling import prices. The U.S. is indeed an unusually desirable place to sell – a reality that attracted unusually large numbers of merchants, domestic and foreign, offering to sell in the U.S. market. This competition ensures that prices yield no exorbitant profits for the sellers. As such, foreign producers aren’t willing (or able) to pay what Ms. Freund, like Mr. Trump, regards to be an entrance fee to the U.S. market.

Foreign sellers already pay, as it were, a ‘fee’ to sell in the U.S. – that fee being in the form of accepting competitive low prices for their wares. These sellers will not be double-charged.

New data support my point: U.S. import prices rose in July by 0.4% (and the prices of  manufactured goods and other nonfuel imports rose by 0.9%).

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

David Henderson dissects the ugly ‘art’ of Trump’s protectionist ‘deal.’ Three slices:

We seem to be headed to a world in which our tariff rates are a multiple of what they were before Trump began his second term. For some countries, notably those in the European Union, tariff rates will be lower than they were before Trump began. That is a victory. But we should be clear about whom it’s a victory for. The main gainers are European consumers, and the secondary gainers are US exporters. The big losers, though, from the high US tariffs, are US consumers and producers who use the tariffed items as inputs, and the secondary losers are foreign exporters.

…..

President Trump has negotiated EU-type deals with the governments of the Philippines, Indonesia, and Vietnam. US consumers will pay a 19 percent tariff rate on goods from the Philippines and from Indonesia, and a 20 percent tariff rate on goods from Vietnam. Consumers in those three countries, meanwhile, will pay a zero percent tariff on imports from the United States. Don’t get me wrong. I’m glad that people in those three countries, almost all of whom are poorer than the average American, will get the benefits of one-way free trade. But I feel bad for Americans who will pay higher taxes. Maybe I really am an American-Firster.

…..

I never believed that President Trump would threaten high tariffs only to get other countries’ tariffs down and then retreat on his own tariffs. I knew too much history about his thinking on trade and tariffs. Some people called me naive for thinking his was simply a protectionist play. I think we know now who was naive.

The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal sees in new data ominous signs that Trump’s tariffs are indeed – surprise! – causing many American producers to pay higher prices. Two slices:

The producer-price index (PPI) in July rose 0.9% in the month and 3.3% over the last year. Consumer-price data released Tuesday (0.2% monthly and 2.7% for the last 12 months) implied households weren’t experiencing tariff-induced price increases, except in some services such as medical care. The PPI numbers tell us this is partly because companies are paying higher prices but haven’t passed them on to customers—yet.

The producer-price data get worse the closer you look. Goods and services both experienced substantial inflation, of 0.7% and 1.1% month-on-month respectively. Goods and services related to business investment in particular are becoming pricier, with the cost of manufacturing equipment rising 0.4% in one month and related services 4.5%.

…..

Inflation is a broad-based, persistent increase in the general price level. Tariffs in that sense aren’t inflationary unless the Fed accommodates them with over-easy monetary policy. But tariffs do raise prices on tariffed goods, which can mean a one-time surge with some potential downstream effects. What matters for voters, and for their confidence in the economy, is what they see in their own paychecks and cost of living.

Republicans are in the political danger zone if tariffs cause price increases—one-off or persistent—that aren’t offset by bigger wage gains. Republicans will make the same mistake as the Biden Administration if they keep telling voters everything is fabulous but the evidence at the grocery store or Applebee’s tells them something different.

Jack Nicastro reports on the Trump administration’s cronyist deals to sell permissions to export. Here’s his conclusion:

Legality aside, Trump’s revenue-sharing agreement with Nvidia and AMD “further blurs the line between the public and private sectors [and is] part and parcel with the Trump administration’s fondness for central planning directed by the president himself,” says [Clark] Packard. It bears repeating that you don’t beat China by copying China, but by embracing the most productive and innovative economic system known to man: the free market.

Washington Post columnist Jason Willick explains that the Trump administration, increasingly desperate to save Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs from being struck down as unlawful by the courts, is only walking those tariffs into deeper legal troubles. A slice:

And hence Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent’s doth-protest-too-much assertion on Fox Business on Tuesday that Trump’s border taxes will survive the courts because they are raising so much money for the federal government. “The amount of money that’s coming in here — I think the more deals we’ve done, the more money coming in, it gets harder and harder for [the Supreme Court] to rule against us,” Bessent said. He added that tariff income is “well in excess” of $300 billion.

Think about that for a second. At issue in the tariff case is whether the president is usurping Congress’s power to tax. And the treasury secretary is pointing out that the tax is so large that the courts can’t possibly find that the president has exceeded his power. That has it backward.

GMU Econ alum Dominic Pino concludes that “the BLS was very, very good at estimating employment.” A slice:

Counting the number of jobs is very, very hard. And the BLS was very, very good at it. For the worst miss to be less than 1 percent and the median miss to be 0.29 percent is an incredible testament to the agency’s professionalism and competence, built over years of experience. Tearing that down is a whole lot easier than was building it up.

Stefan Bartl decries the GOP’s embrace of collectivism. A slice:

The Republican Party once sold itself as the last line of defense against an overreaching federal government. Today, it champions state control over private enterprise, embraces protectionist tariffs that raise consumer prices, and presides over record‑shattering spending that will burden future generations with mountains of debt. What began as a movement to curb Washington’s reach has morphed into a governing philosophy that wields government power to direct markets, pick winners, and paper over self‑inflicted economic wounds. In forsaking the creed of limited government, the GOP has not merely drifted from its roots, it has become the very Leviathan it once vowed to oppose.

My intrepid Mercatus Center colleague, Veronique de Rugy, applauds recent administration efforts to replace dogma with science in analyses of climate change. A slice:

This report — the first of many of its kind, I hope — shows that it’s still possible to respectfully and professionally confront entrenched dogma. It takes experts and people in power who are willing to be challenged or erroneously smeared as deniers. That’s no small thing. I also hope the result is a climate policy crafted from facts, whatever they might be, rather than fear.

For that to happen, others must insist that open debate guides the response. And more importantly, we must all tolerate the debate.

George Will explains that a Mamdani-led socialist experiment in New York City, while it would undoubtedly be bad for the citizens of Metropolis, might unintentionally do some good for the rest of America. A slice:

Mamdani as mayor might not be much worse than his principal rivals: Current Mayor Eric Adams has a mediocre record and an aroma of corruption; the recycled Andrew M. Cuomo resigned under various clouds during his fourth term as governor. As mayor, none of the three would probably be as admired as the current police commissioner, Jessica S. Tisch. None of the three would be apt to challenge the teachers union that controls the nation’s largest public school system, which is producing mostly depressing results.

Besides, if Mamdani would be marginally worse than those other two products of the city’s political culture, that might be constructive. He might become America’s François Mitterrand.

As France’s president, Mitterrand set back socialism for several generations. He was elected in 1981 promising a “rupture with capitalism” and a “break with the logic of profitability.” He implemented sweeping nationalizations, radically increased welfare benefits, imposed higher taxes on the investing classes, instituted a shorter workweek without reduced compensation, etc. In 1982, after the franc had been thrice devalued, he pivoted to “socialist rigor,” a.k.a. austerity: “You can’t continue to crush with taxes and fees all those people who create wealth in France.”

Socialism in a circumscribed but conspicuous jurisdiction can occasionally be a valuable reminder of toxic political temptations. Hence Mamdani’s usefulness.

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Quotation of the Day…

… is from page 153 of the 1983 Transaction Publishers edition of Redvers Opie’s 1934 translation of Joseph Schumpeter’s 1912 book, The Theory of Economic Development:

Entrepreneurial profit … is the expression of the value of what the entrepreneur contributes to production in exactly the same sense that wages are the value expression of what the worker “produces.” It is not a profit of exploitation any more than are wages.

DBx: Yes. And failure to grasp this point has led many people, not least Karl Marx, to mistakenly conclude that profit is an extraction of value by persons who do not produce that value from persons who do produce it. This mistaken conclusion has fueled a great deal of tyranny.

Successful entrepreneurs in markets, including those pictured here, earn their riches by creatively arranging for resources, including labor, to be used in ways that are more productive than anyone had thought of earlier. Far from extracting their profits from workers, successful entrepreneurs make their workers more productive, and competition obliges these entrepreneurs to share the great bulk of these gains with workers and consumers.

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Correcting Some Factual Errors About Trump’s Tariffs

Here’s a letter to Barron’s. (For alerting me to this essay by Graf I thank Steven Kaufman.)

Editor:

Julia Graf’s attempt to justify Trump’s tariffs misfires on several fronts; here are three (“The Inflation Panic Is All Wrong. How Tariffs Could Lead to Interest Rate Cuts.” August 14).

First, Ms. Graf slays a straw man when she correctly argues that tariffs will have little to no effect on the price level: Higher prices for protected outputs will largely be offset by lower prices for unprotected outputs. Contrary to Ms. Graf’s supposition, therefore, the core economic case against protective U.S. tariffs isn’t that these levies will fuel inflation but, rather, that they’ll pull resources away from industries for which Americans have a comparative advantage and into industries for which Americans have a comparative disadvantage. Although the result over time will be economic productivity (and, hence, living standards) lower than otherwise, it’s unlikely that this effect will be able to be isolated in measures of aggregate inflation.

Second, it’s untrue that Trump’s first-term tariffs “helped pull some manufacturing back. From 2017 to early 2020, the economy added roughly 500,000 manufacturing jobs, outpacing the pre-tariff growth rate.” Ms. Graf mistakes manufacturing employment for manufacturing output. Manufacturing output was slightly lower in January 2020 (the month before covid hysteria took hold) than it was in January 2017. Tellingly, manufacturing output did rise somewhat from early 2017 through the summer of 2018, when Trump’s tariffs began earnestly kicking in. But from September 2018 through January 2020, this output fell by 3.1 percent. Manufacturing employment rose only because the productivity of manufacturing workers fell: The hourly productivity of manufacturing workers fell in each quarter starting in the third quarter of 2018 through the fourth quarter of 2019. These data are consistent with economists’ argument that protective tariffs reduce productivity.

Third, it’s also untrue that manufacturing capacity expanded during Trump’s first term. In fact, it shrunk, being 2 percent lower in January 2020 than in January 2017.

It’s easy to make a case for protectionism by getting the facts wrong, but it’s almost impossible to do so when getting the facts right.

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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Here’s a follow-up letter to a new correspondent.

Mr. S__:

In your follow-up email to this post you charge me with failing to “admit that Pres. Trump has millions times more business sense” than do I and other economists. You recommend that I “shut up and let an expert show how it’s done.”

I confess to having no business experience, but I know enough to know that no sane business person would run his or her company in the way that Trump wants to run what he erroneously takes to be USA, Inc.

Trump mistakenly believes that USA, Inc., is cheated whenever any of the other economic entities with which it deals, such as Switzerland, Inc., buys less from USA, Inc., than USA, Inc., buys from that entity. Trump wants USA, Inc., to sell to (export to) each and every one of the other individual countries with which it trades as much as USA, Inc., buys from (imports from) that country.

So let’s put Trump’s belief to the test by supposing that he isn’t president of the United States but, instead, president and CEO of General Motors. Trump would then insist on charging GM’s materials-acquisition division a penalty for the steel it purchases from US Steel, with this penalty to remain in place until US Steel agrees to buy as many automobiles from GM as GM buys steel from US Steel. If US Steel (and each of any other steel suppliers) refuses to satisfy this condition, Trump would then suffer GM to get by using less steel.

CEO Trump would make the same demands on each and every one of GM’s many other suppliers: GM would restrict its purchases of rubber from rubber producers until and unless each individual rubber producer spends on GM outputs at least as much as GM spends on rubber from that individual supplier. Ditto for each company that supplies GM with aluminum, chemicals, wood, machine tools, insurance, electricity to run its factories, and on and on.

Indeed, CEO Trump, upon observing, to his horror, that GM runs trade deficits with each of its workers, would refuse to employ anyone who doesn’t annually buy from GM as much as GM annually buys from that worker.

After implementing his new policy, CEO Trump would boast about his genius demands to GM’s board and shareholders – who would immediately fire him for his unprecedented incompetence in running that corporation into the dirt.

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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