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Protectionist Rhetoric Will Accelerate the Dollar's Slide
Ludwig von Mises Institute ^ | 11/20/2007 | David Leo Veksler

Posted on 11/29/2007 7:11:00 PM PST by LowCountryJoe

Pat Buchanan's recent attempt to diagnose the sinking dollar demonstrates that ignorance of basic economics is not limited to the Left. Buchanan points out the plummeting value of the dollar relative to other currencies and major commodities such as gold (up 24% this year) and oil (up over 50% in 12 months). He then declares that "the prime suspect in the death of the dollar is the massive trade deficits America has run up" to "maintain her standard of living and to sustain the American Imperium." This diagnosis offers a tantalizing glimpse of the truth, yet shatters it with protectionist bromides.

First, let's deflate the protectionist rhetoric. What are trade deficits and surpluses?

A trade deficit means that in sum, American dollars are going abroad in exchange for foreign goods. Consider what this means. If foreigners never cashed in those dollars, Americans would essentially be getting foreign goods free of charge. Protectionists like Buchanan condemn this as "borrowing," but this is actually a form of investment — both in US industry and in US dollars. Foreigners have been investing in the United States for decades for two primary reasons: the superior returns due to the growth potential of American capitalism, and the dominance and (relative) stability of the US dollar, which made them useful as a means of exchange apart from their purchasing power of US goods. Americans are not living "beyond our means," as Buchanan claims; we are simply a more profitable investment, with a more stable currency, than the foreign investors' own countries.

A trade surplus on the other hand, means that in sum, US goods are being sent abroad in exchange for foreign currency. A trade surplus is a form of investing in other countries, since (fiat) foreign currency is only worth the foreign capital it can purchase. This happened after World War II, when the United States sent capital to shattered foreign economies and reaped returns as the value of their economies — and thus their currencies — grew.

So are trade deficits preferable to trade surpluses? In a narrow sense, yes. A nation that has strong economic prospects will attract foreign investment and therefore experience trade deficits. Conversely, when the domestic economy is stifled by regulations and monetary manipulations, investors will send their savings abroad and their country will run a trade surplus. (This explains why the US deficit has consistently fallen during recessions and grown during periods of expansion.) However, the broader lesson is that trade inequalities indicate the net flow of foreign investment, and the benefit of the inequality is ultimately validated by the profitability of those investments. Profitable foreign investment results in GDP growth and positive currency valuations, whereas unprofitable foreign investment erodes economic growth and devalues the currency of the investment's recipient. Could a sufficiently large and wasteful investment be responsible for the current dollar crisis?

A large part of the US trade deficit comes from the bonds (treasury securities) the US government has been selling to foreigners to finance the growing federal budget deficit. The value of these bonds depends on both the strength of the US economy and the loss of value caused by expansion of the money supply. When the US Treasury sells bonds to individuals, it diverts savings from private investments; this diversion is a form of taxation. When it sells bonds to the Federal Reserve, it exchanges bonds for newly created dollars, which is a form of monetary expansion (inflation). Additionally, when the government sells debt to foreigners, it creates a liability against the US economy. Foreigners buying deficit debt are in essence betting on the ability of the government to provide a return on the investment in the form of positive economic growth. What happens when the investment fails to turn a profit?

The primary reason for the $9 trillion federal deficit is the so-called "War on Terror," including the spending on Homeland Security, Afghanistan, and Iraq. Unless you believe these funds averted an economic meltdown due to terrorism, these funds represent a near-total loss. Tanks, bombs, and bureaucratic paper pushers consume vast funds, yet they contribute nothing to the economy, aside from benefiting military contractors. This economic destruction is one of the biggest reasons for the declining dollar. (Perhaps the major reason is the credit bubble created by the inflationary policy of the Fed since the early 2000s, which is now collapsing and making the economy less attractive as an investment target.)

The falling dollar will make it increasingly expensive for the US government to accumulate more debt. Eventually, it will be forced to either cut spending, explicitly shift costs to US citizens by increasing taxes directly, or (most likely) increase taxes through higher inflation. Investors have already anticipated this and flocked to other currencies and to gold as a refuge. The slide will likely continue until some kind of budget reconciliation is evident.

The overwhelming response to the problems created by the government's financial irresponsibility has been to call for more protectionism, as Mr. Buchanan is doing. Because it creates barriers to trade and investment, protectionism makes the US dollar less valuable to both foreign consumers and investors, thus accelerating the fall of the dollar. Investors have certainly anticipated this as well — but don't blame them for betting on the gullibility of Americans to the protectionist rhetoric of economic ignoramuses like Paul Krugman and Pat Buchanan.

If we can avoid the protectionist trap and reconcile the budget, the falling value of the dollar will eventually attract investors and stimulate exports. As the developing world becomes richer and freer, the US dollar is unlikely to enjoy the unchallenged superiority it once had, but maturing foreign markets will attract products and services designed in America, and we will once again become a recipient of foreign investment. Free markets and American ingenuity made the United States the greatest economy in the world. They are the only way we will keep it that way.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; Philosophy
KEYWORDS: dollar; economy; protectionism
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1 posted on 11/29/2007 7:11:01 PM PST by LowCountryJoe
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To: LowCountryJoe
The FR Buchanan thread was a classic. 600+ replies . . . this one will get 12. :)
2 posted on 11/29/2007 7:15:23 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: LowCountryJoe
I do not share this author’s views on war: I didn’t see that we had much of a choice given the fact that 12 years worth of non-compliance to cease-fire agreements had to be stopped and was probably causing us to look like paper tigers to those in that region. However no reasonable person could deny the fact that there is a massive bureaucracy withing the Defense Dept. But the economics here are sound.
3 posted on 11/29/2007 7:16:33 PM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: 1rudeboy

This was a clear and lucid explanation of the trade deficit and what needs to be done. The government must balance its budget and stop borrowing.


4 posted on 11/29/2007 7:19:40 PM PST by Forgiven_Sinner (The most incomprehensible thing about the universe is that it is at all comprehensible.)
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To: 1rudeboy
Yeah, why is that anyhow? I think that it proves that these protectionist refuse to read things that do not jive with their current level of understanding. Can you imagine if everyone on the Right was this willingly ignorant...who would be left to refute the lies the Left writes about? Imagine an endless stream of PJB and Lou Dobbs, more willing to bash liberty than they would be to disavow big government intrusion.
5 posted on 11/29/2007 7:21:12 PM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: LowCountryJoe

Nice pro-Paul piece.


6 posted on 11/29/2007 7:24:41 PM PST by BGHater (Lead. The MSG for the 21st Century.)
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To: Forgiven_Sinner
This explaination of the so-called trade deficit is far better, in my opinion (both parts).
7 posted on 11/29/2007 7:25:22 PM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: LowCountryJoe

Some people are only happy if they are miserable. They flock to threads with appropriately negative headlines in order to share their misery with others that feel the same way. It’s a pathology.


8 posted on 11/29/2007 7:26:07 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: LowCountryJoe

Wrong. Protectionist ACTION will cause economic harm. You can’t “talk down” an economy, contrary to popular belief.


9 posted on 11/29/2007 7:28:15 PM PST by Clemenza (Rudy Giuliani, like Pesto and Seattle, belongs in the scrap heap of '90s Culture)
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To: LowCountryJoe

BRING IT ON.


10 posted on 11/29/2007 7:28:59 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (Berlin Olympics 1936 = Beijing Olympics 2008)
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To: LowCountryJoe

Think about it . . . it’s easier to wring one’s hands and ask “what does the U.S. export, anyway?” or say “the U.S. has the export-profile of a Third World nation.” No homework required. That should be Buchanan’s motto, by the way.


11 posted on 11/29/2007 7:29:22 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

Time for a good trade war.


12 posted on 11/29/2007 7:30:18 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (Berlin Olympics 1936 = Beijing Olympics 2008)
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To: 1rudeboy
Maybe that's the way I should look at it from now on, then, as though I were intruding in on their pity-party by offering cookies, ice cream, and a big box of tissues. "No, no, I don't want your stinin' goodies or your box of tissues. I'd rather wipe the snot on my sleeves and go hungry!"
13 posted on 11/29/2007 7:30:18 PM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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To: LowCountryJoe
Great Post! You are right, though, in anticipating simple slogans will outweigh reason on this matter. Minnesota has a trade deficit with Florida and California, but we seem to survive. Globally the same applies.

If you are an investor, whenever there is a larger than usual budget deficit, buy stocks the next year. Budget deficits augur for a rising stock market while budget surpluses augur for a declining stock market.

As far as the current account deficit would you choose to be like Germany and Japan? They both have large surpluses and no or little growth economies.

Buchanan panders to those who emotionally equate increased foreign trade with weakness. They are stuck with stone age, reflex thinking that one should keep everything in the tribe. It never works and every effort to kill foreign trade results in an increasing likelihood of economic stagnation or worse.

What the Buchananites never tell you is that 40%+ of the profits of $&P 500 are the result of foreign sales. Foreign trade results in a situation where 20%+ of our employment depends on it.

14 posted on 11/29/2007 7:31:26 PM PST by shrinkermd
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To: LowCountryJoe
From Wikepedia:

Abolitionalists of Smoot-Hawley (Tariff Act 1930)argue that it angered major trading partners who retaliated. Canada for example raised its tariffs and forged closer economic links with the British Commonwealth, and U.S.-Canada trade plunged. France and Britain protested and developed new trade avenues. Germany developed a system of autarky. Imports plunged two-thirds from $4.4 billion (1929) to $1.5 billion (1933), exports fell from $5.4 billion to $2.1 billion, in both cases far more than the 50% fall in Gross Domestic Product. The tremendous drop in foreign trade was a stunning shock to the proponents of Smoot-Hawley and effectively destroyed advocacy of high tariffs in the U.S.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoot-Hawley_Tariff_Act

15 posted on 11/29/2007 7:31:49 PM PST by Brad from Tennessee ("A politician can't give you anything he hasn't first stolen from you.")
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To: Clemenza; LowCountryJoe
"Wrong. Protectionist ACTION will cause economic harm. You can’t “talk down” an economy, contrary to popular belief."

I had the same reaction when I first read that title. It's just a poorly worded title though. The article doesn't claim that rhetoric alone causes harm.

16 posted on 11/29/2007 7:32:38 PM PST by antinomian (Show me a robber baron and I'll show you a pocket full of senators.)
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To: Brad from Tennessee

No more excuses.

Time for a good, old-fashioned trade war. NOW!

The current situation is destroying America.


17 posted on 11/29/2007 7:33:30 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (Berlin Olympics 1936 = Beijing Olympics 2008)
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To: Brad from Tennessee
Here's an interesting graph I periodically discover and rediscover at Heritage.


18 posted on 11/29/2007 7:34:02 PM PST by 1rudeboy
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To: 1rudeboy

You misspelled “spam”.


19 posted on 11/29/2007 7:34:43 PM PST by Cringing Negativism Network (Berlin Olympics 1936 = Beijing Olympics 2008)
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To: 1rudeboy
The new question I will begin asking: are you in favor of immediately withdrawing from all trade agreements? If "yes", then allow me to give you the contact information of your representative and be sure to let me see your letter before you send it off. If "no", then why all of a sudden would withdrawing from the agreement not be something you'd like to press your representative to do...being that trade with any foreigner is bad and all.
20 posted on 11/29/2007 7:35:35 PM PST by LowCountryJoe (I'm a Paleo-liberal: I believe in freedom; am socially independent and a borderline fiscal anarchist)
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