Trump's Great Statesman Tariffs
Trade barriers made America great...
The ELECTION is a tight race, although it appears to be breaking for
Trump, says Jim Rickards in The Daily
Reckoning.
The Democratic strategy is essentially to call Trump
Hitler and a would-be dictator
who would jail his political opponents (sound familiar?) and destroy democracy.
Though they focus much more
on Trump the man than his actual policies, it's important to understand Trump's position on tariffs, for
example, because it would
impact millions of Americans.
Donald Trump recently did an interview with John
Micklethwait, Bloomberg's top
editor and a former editor of The Economist.
Micklethwait made the tired point
that Trump's tariffs would
raise prices and be bad for Americans.
Most of us have been taught that free
trade is good and that tariffs
are bad. And on the surface it certainly seems true. The theory of free trade based on comparative
advantage was advocated by British
economist David Ricardo in the early 19th century.
Ricardo's theory said that
trading nations are endowed
with attributes that give them a relative advantage in producing certain goods versus
others.
These
attributes could consist of natural resources, climate, population, river systems, education, ports,
financial capacity or any other
factor of production. Nations should produce those goods as to which they have a natural advantage and
trade with other nations for
goods where the advantage was not so great.
Countries should specialize in what
they do best, and let others
also specialize in what they do best. Then countries could simply trade the goods they make for the
goods made by others.
All sides would be better off because prices would be lower as a result of specialization
in those goods where you have a
natural advantage.
It's a nice theory often summed up in the idea that Tom
Brady shouldn't mow his own lawn
because it makes more sense to pay a landscaper while he practices football.
For example, if the UK had an
advantage in textile production and Portugal had an advantage in wine production, then the UK and
Portugal should trade wool for
wine.
But if the theory of comparative advantage were true, Japan would still
be exporting tuna fish instead
of cars, computers, TVs, steel and much more.
The same can be said of the
globalists' view that capital
should flow freely across borders. That might be advantageous in theory but market manipulation by
central banks and rogue actors like
Goldman Sachs and big hedge funds make it a treacherous proposition.
The
problem with this theory of
comparative advantage is that the factors of production are not permanent and they are not
immobile.
If labor
moves from the countryside to the city in China, then suddenly China has a comparative advantage in
cheap labor. If finance capital
moves from New York banks to direct foreign investment in Chinese factories, then China has the
comparative advantage in capital
also.
Trump understands this, Micklethwait doesn't. Trump didn't just make
polite conversation in the
interview. He called out Micklethwait by saying, "It must be hard for you to spend 25 years talking
about tariffs as being negative
and then have somebody explain to you that you're totally wrong." Ouch!
Micklethwait certainly isn't alone.
Listening to hysterical commentary from the mainstream media about Trump's tariffs, one would think his
policies were in violation of
the US Constitution.
Nothing could be further from the truth. By advocating
tariffs, Trump actually wants to
return to what made America great in the first place. In fact, tariffs are as American as apple
pie.
From
1790-1962, the United States pursued high tariff policies under a program known as the American
System.
It
was created by George Washington's secretary of the Treasury, Alexander Hamilton, who drafted a report
to Congress called the Report
on Manufactures presented in 1791. Hamilton proposed that in order to have a strong country, America
needed a strong manufacturing
base with jobs that taught skills and offered income security.
To achieve this,
Hamilton proposed subsidies
to US businesses so they could compete successfully against more established UK and European
businesses.
These subsidies might include grants of government land or rights of way, purchase orders from the
government itself or outright
payments. This was a mercantilist system that encouraged a trade surplus and the accumulation of gold
reserves.
Hamilton's plan was later proposed on a broader scale by Kentucky Sen. Henry Clay. This new
plan began with the Tariff of
1816. Later on, Abraham Lincoln adopted the American System as his platform in the election of 1860, and
it became a bedrock principle
of the new Republican Party.
It was affirmed by William McKinley at the end of
the 19th century and by Dwight
Eisenhower in the 1950s. The 19th and early 20th centuries were a heyday of the American System. This
period was characterized by
enormous economic growth and population expansion by the US
The American System
was also accompanied mostly
by low inflation or even deflation (which increases the purchasing power of everyday citizens) despite
occasional financial panics and
some inflation during the Civil War.
The key takeaway is that America grew rich
and powerful from 1787-1962,
a period of 175 years, using tariffs, subsidies and other barriers to trade to nurture domestic industry
and protect high-paying
manufacturing jobs.
But under the neo-liberal, globalist international order
that prevailed in the decades
after World War II, free trade doctrine supplanted the American System.
Globalism requires free trade, open
borders and free capital flows or as close as you can come. In theory, this allows for price discovery,
lower costs and higher returns
to capital.
In reality, it causes lost jobs, lost competitiveness and lower
wages, especially for Americans.
US industry was stripped bare and US jobs were lost by the millions, with China being the main
beneficiary.
Globalists embrace what they call "encasement." The idea is that national governments don't matter. What
does matter is that all
global powers – democratic, communist, socialist, kleptocratic – play by the same supranational rules
that encase the system of
sovereigns.
Free trade is part of that system (in reality, it's not free trade
but managed
trade).
Trump is rejecting the globalist playbook. He's pursuing the same basic
policies that predominated in
the US from George Washington through Dwight Eisenhower.
He simply wants to
return to the American System
that once made America great.











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