Posted on 01/07/2016 5:05:15 PM PST by conservativejoy
So the average Joe gets to pay way, way more at the store and gets to worry about losing his job after China inevitably retaliates with tariffs of its own, shrinking foreign demand for U.S. goods? That sounds like a plan.
Four years ago, when Trump flirted with running for president, he suggested a 25 percent tariff on Chinese goods. Now itâs 45 percent. Is that based on an economic calculation or is it just Trump getting a little crazier with the protectionist cheez whiz to prove he's more populist now than ever?
"The only power that we have with China," Mr. Trump said, "is massive trade."...
"I would do a tax. and the tax, let me tell you what the tax should be ...the tax should be 45 percent," Mr. Trump said.
China is on a path this year to surpass Canada as the biggest single trading partner of the United States, and its factories provide American consumers with lower-cost products ranging from clothing to computers, so such steep tariffs could hurt the pocketbooks of many Americans.
This CNN Money piece from 2011 concisely addresses the weak points in the tariff idea. If Trump is eyeing it as a bluff, to scare China into ending its currency manipulation, that's one high-stakes bluff. Would China's leadership bow to an overt economic threat from a new U.S. president upon his taking office, knowing what kind of signal that would send about Chinese resolve towards America? If they call President Alpha Male's bluff, then he has no choice but to implement the tariff and the trade war is on. And as the CNN piece explains, a U.S. market that's effectively closed to Chinese imports wouldn't necessarily turn to U.S. manufacturers and U.S. workers to fill the void. More likely itâd turn to other developing economies with lower labor costs to supply those cheap goods. Result: Tension with China, pain for American manufacturers who'd suddenly find the Chinese market closed to them, and less than what was promised by Trump about a revival in American manufacturing. (China could also challenge the tariff in the WTO, but I assume Caesar Trump would pull the U.S. out of that if the ruling didn't go his way.) As for whether this represents good, old-fashioned "conservative" economics, let's not even bother analyzing it. We're well past that point of Trumpmania now.
Here's something else to raise an eyebrow from Trump's meeting with the NYT editorial board today:
In addressing the Oregon standoff, Mr. Trump also spoke about the "great anger out there" that appears to be fueling the situation in Burns, Ore.
"I think what I'd do, as president, is I would make a phone call to whoever, to the group," he said, adding later, "I'd talk to the leader. I would talk to him and I would say, 'You gotta get out - come see me, but you gotta get out.'"
"You cannot let people take over federal property," Mr. Trump said. "You can't, because once you do that, you don't have a government anymore. I think, frankly, they've been there too long."
President Trump would directly negotiate with people who are illegally occupying federal property? That's an incentive for every radical across the spectrum to create hostage situations, knowing that the president's direct involvement in resolving it would be a huge media spotlight for their cause. If Black Lives Matter seized a federal office somewhere tomorrow and Obama decided to speak with them directly, we'd be killing him today for legitimizing the takeover by granting them a presidential audience. Trump's smart enough to understand that, but his ego's too big to let him absorb the lesson. Because he's convinced of his own supreme competence in all situations, he thinks that him talking directly to Ammon Bundy would obviously be the easiest way to end the standoff expeditiously. As for what he means by "they've been there too long," he told the Times that he wasn't necessarily calling for military action but that "at a certain point you have to do something." Er, like what? Obama and his deputies have played the Oregon standoff smartly by waiting Bundy and his crew out; a new Ruby Ridge would be a disaster for all sides. As it is, by being patient, the feds have put Bundy in a position where heâs already talking about leaving voluntarily at some point. Trump, forever impelled to "show strength," might choose the Ruby Ridge option simply because he couldn't tolerate the perception of weakness in strategic patience.
Via Andrew Stiles, here's Trump floating the tariff idea back in 2011. If you're at work, be advised that there's an F-bomb (actually, an MF-bomb) to come. Here again you see the core of Trumpism at work: The tariff might not work if a guy with a high-pitched feminine voice is pushing it, but if President Alpha Male pushes it, those puppies in Beijing will roll over and let him scratch their bellies. There are no tough guys in China's brutal authoritarian top tier, after all.
No more cheap crap from China? Sign me up, bonus more American jobs for Americans, I am all in.
NO, they’ll just up their trade with Russia and the Russian economy will get a boost.
It is barely 100 Billion a year. It is around 8 billion a month. Yes, that is chump change, a fart in the wind, in an 18 Trillion Dollar Economy.
What does China buy from us that a tariff they impose would hurt?
Would only hurt the US middle class that depends on cheap Chinese imports to fill out the basics of The American Dream life.
Looky what I found:
Trump articulated his vision of a conservative leader â “a president with heart” â one he said may not match the typical Republican prototype but one he says America needs. “You have to take care of people that can’t take care of themselves, folks,” Trump explained. “I know a lot of us are Republicans and conservatives, but we still have to take care of people that take â you know, we have to have a heart.”
http://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/donald-trump-hails-loyal-supporters-smart-not-so-smart-alike-n491026
The conservative dream! Another GWB! Another give the store away progressive!
Write your fiction elsewhere.
https://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html
Shouldn't you be up in New Hampshire working for Jeb and the other free traitors?
Missed my sarcasm FRiend ;)
I should have added a sarc tag to my post.
They are more likely to build their own airplanes than they are to quit buying Boeings and start buying Tupelovs. Now, if you’d said EU, it might show that you are thinking about it rather than hitting the US Chamber of Commerce talking points.
“China is our biggest trade partner along with Canada.”
No.
Mexico and Canada.
Mexico buys more from us than China.
And you didn’t answer my question as to what is China’s biggest import from the US.
The proposed tariff is on imports, not exports. China would simply turn elsewhere to Russia and India for what they are now importing from us.
Better to let them die in the streets huh?
FULibtard
My best guess is coal.
Close.
Seed oil.
It is also the massive loss of our manufacturing capacity, much of it is now at the mercy of our trading partners, many of whom have goals diametrical apposed to our own.
Thanks!
Source: https://www.census.gov/foreign-trade/balance/c5700.html
Imports from China for 2015: 443 billion, exports to China: 106 billion.
So the tariff war would cost manufacturing jobs meme is pretty immaterial. Very likely it would not cost a single US job in that sector.
Jobs would likely be lost at retailers and distributors who sell considerable amounts of made in China material - probably less than would be gained by replacing those goods from another source.
That’s what I said. What does China buy from us that they putting an import tarrif on would hurt?
I don’t know what they get from us.
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