Writing in the Wall Street Journal, the Cato Institute’s Colin Grabow puts Trump’s punitive taxation of Americans’ purchases of imports – a.k.a. protective tariffs – in historical context. Two slices:
Donald Trump has imposed tariffs on a whim and trashed past trade agreements, with rhetoric steeped in economic nationalism and zero-sum thinking. He thinks that trade consists not of mutual benefits but of a winner and a loser.
Yet for all its volatility, Mr. Trump’s trade agenda isn’t that much of a departure from past policy. For decades, American trade policy has been animated by mercantilist thinking that treats imports with suspicion, exports as trade’s primary reward, and the trade deficit as a scorecard.
The American approach to trade liberalization has long hinged on reciprocity. Instead of eliminating trade barriers to benefit U.S. consumers and firms, Washington has treated trade barriers as bargaining chips to be negotiated away only if foreign governments respond in kind. Imports’ many benefits—lower prices, greater choice, improved productivity—have been played down or ignored.
In some ways, this approach is understandable. Opening U.S. markets to foreign competition creates resistance from affected industries. To overcome this, policymakers highlight new export opportunities to other business sectors. But in doing so they reinforce the idea that exports are the primary objective of trade and imports are a price to be paid—a reversal of reality.
While Mr. Trump’s trade policies don’t appear to be informed by careful study—he operates more on vibes than on Adam Smith—he has embraced this underlying logic and pushed it further. If reducing import barriers in exchange for similar actions by others is good, then why not take it to the next level—raising import barriers and demanding even greater market access from other countries? Mr. Trump’s trade policy isn’t a repudiation of past approaches but their culmination.
…..
America has long suffered under warped bipartisan trade policy that prioritizes exports over imports and reciprocal deals over unilateral liberalization. Mr. Trump deserves criticism for his erratic and economically destructive trade decisions, but the intellectual groundwork for his extreme approach was laid by years of bad policy.
Also writing insightfully in today’s Wall Street Journal is AIER’s Samuel Gregg, who explains the benefits that American workers reap from foreigners employed under the H-1B visa program. Two slices:
The theme underlying these claims [by the Trump administration] is that the H-1B program—like trade liberalization and economic openness to the world generally—is hurting American workers. Consequently, the argument goes, the legal importation of foreign high-skilled workers into America via H-1B visas should be harder and more expensive.
Missing from this picture is appreciation of how H-1B visas benefit the U.S. economy, particularly the American-born workforce.
In the first place, there is considerable evidence that the young skilled immigrant workers typically granted H-1B visas increase overall U.S. employment. One 2015 study of the employment structure of U.S. firms found “rising overall employment of skilled workers with increased skilled immigrant employment by the firm,” with the native employment expansion occurring primarily among younger workers. A more recent analysis, by the National Foundation for American Policy, likewise concluded that “H-1B visa holders do not adversely affect U.S. workers.” Instead, they contribute to “lower unemployment rates and faster earnings growth among college graduates, including recent college graduates.”
…..
In a saner policy environment, these factors would encourage American policymakers interested in stoking American employment and growth to expand the availability of H-1B visas and allow more foreign-born high-skilled workers into the U.S. The same considerations suggest that Washington should make it easier for such workers to do, at some point, what I did seven years after entering the country on an H-1B visa: become an American citizen and personally invested in this great country and its dynamic economy.
Unfortunately, in the upside-down world of economic nationalism in which we now live, different outcomes are more likely to be the case. The biggest losers, sadly enough, will be American workers—the very people whose interests economic nationalists claim to be protecting.
Anders Ingemarson makes the case that MAGA is postmodern. A slice:
Postmodernism is a strain of philosophy that constantly questions the rules, pokes holes in “objective” truths, and turns the serious business of metaphysics (is reality out there or in our heads?), epistemology (how we know), morality, and—yes—politics into a skeptic mishmash of perspectives and performances. It’s fundamentally a negation of Enlightenment philosophy which champions reality, reason, objective truth, rationality, individualism, respect for and protection of individual rights, limited government, and—although often with only one or two cheers—capitalism, with free markets for goods, services and ideas.
MAGA and Trump fit postmodernism to a T, embracing many of its classic attitudes—mostly without bothering about the philosophy behind. In the MAGA universe, truth is less about cold, hard facts and more about what sticks—what sounds right, feels true, or gets shouted loudest.
The Editorial Board of the Wall Street Journal praises Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) for pushing back against FCC head Brendan Carr’s authoritarian assault on freedom of speech. A slice:
Most Republicans are afraid of uttering even a syllable of disapproval about the Trump Administration, so kudos to Ted Cruz for noticing the danger from Brendan Carr’s use of regulatory threats to stifle free speech.
The Texas Senator used his podcast on Friday to criticize Mr. Carr, who runs the Federal Communications Commission, for his threats against Disney, its ABC network and its station affiliates if they didn’t punish Jimmy Kimmel. Disney then pulled the late-night host off the air “indefinitely.”
Mr. Carr “says, ‘We can do this the easy way or we can do this the hard way,’” Mr. Cruz told his listeners, quoting Mr. Carr. “That’s right out of ‘Goodfellas.’ That’s right out of a mafioso coming into a bar going, ‘Nice bar you have here. It’d be a shame if something happened to it.’”
The Senator added that he’s no fan of Mr. Kimmel, but he warned conservative that government power abused in this way won’t hurt only the left. “What [Mr. Carr] said there is dangerous as hell,” Mr. Cruz continued. “It might feel good right now to threaten Jimmy Kimmel, but when it is used to silence every conservative in America, we will regret it.”
That’s exactly right. Mr. Carr used to understand this too, and he criticized Democrats for using government power to censor conservatives when he was a commissioner in the FCC minority. But now that he’s chairman, he follows the whims of the White House.
Reason‘s Jacob Sullum applauds Ted Cruz’s – and Rand Paul’s – criticisms of the FCC’s Brendan Carr’s threats made in light of Jimmy Kimmel’s (baseless but perfectly legal) on-air comments. A slice:
By abusing his power to exert pressure on ABC and its affiliates, Cruz said, Carr was setting an example that Democrats are apt to copy. “Going down this road, there will come a time when a Democrat…wins the White House,” the senator said, and “they will silence us. They will use this power, and they will use it ruthlessly. And that is dangerous.”
Although “it might feel good right now to threaten Jimmy Kimmel,” Cruz said, “when it is used to silence every conservative in America, we will regret it….It is unbelievably dangerous for government to put itself in the position of saying, ‘We’re going to decide what speech we like and what we don’t, and we’re going to threaten to take you off air if we don’t like what you’re saying.'”
Sen. Rand Paul (R–Ky.) agreed that Carr’s involvement in kiboshing Kimmel was “absolutely inappropriate.” The FCC’s chairman “has got no business weighing in on this,” Paul said on Sunday’s edition of Meet the Press. “If you’re losing money, you can be fired. But the government’s got no business in it. And the FCC was wrong to weigh in. And I’ll fight any attempt by the government to get involved with speech.”
Here’s David Henderson on Disney’s suspension of Jimmy Kimmel’s show.
GMU Econ alum Bryan Cutsinger looks back at the Banking Act of 1935. A slice:
Previously, each Reserve Bank set its own discount rate. The Board could sign off, but lacked the power to force changes or to impose a uniform national rate. The 1935 Act changed that. From then on, the Board could compel changes and, if it wished, establish a single discount rate for the entire country.
Finally, the Act strengthened the Fed’s independence. Before 1935, the Treasury Secretary and the Comptroller of the Currency sat on the Federal Reserve Board, with the Treasury Secretary serving as its chair. The Act removed them, creating a new Board of Governors composed solely of presidential appointees serving long, staggered terms, with a separate chair nominated by the President. Around the same time, the Fed left the Treasury Building for its own headquarters on Constitution Avenue. The Fed’s move was both a symbolic and practical marker of independence.
Some good news: “Global child poverty has been on a steady decline since 2014.”