Posted on 08/27/2015 6:51:48 AM PDT by SeekAndFind
Heres a historical fact that Donald Trump, and many voters attracted to him, may not know: The last American president who was a trade protectionist was Republican Herbert Hoover. Obviously, Hoovers economic strategy didnt turn out so well either for the nation or for the GOP.
Does Trump aspire to be a 21st-century Hoover, with a modernized platform of the 1930 Smoot-Hawley tariff, which collapsed the banking system and helped send the U.S. and the world economy into a decade-long depression?
We cant help wondering whether the recent panic in world financial markets is in part a result of the Trump assault on free trade.
Trump is also running full throttle on an anti-immigration platform that could hurt growth as well as alienate the GOP from the ethnic voters it needs to win in 2016.
We call this the Trump Fortress America platform. He clearly sees international trade and immigration as negative-sum games for American workers.
Trump recently announced that as president he would prohibit American companies such as Ford from building plants in Mexico. He moans pessimistically that China is eating our lunch and sucking the blood out of the U.S.
But following the anti-business, rule-making assault from Obama, strategic tax cuts and regulatory relief not trade and immigration barriers are the solution to Americas competitiveness deficit.
A draft of Trumps 14-point economic manifesto promises that, as president, he would modify or cancel any business or trade agreement that hinders American business development, or is shown to create an unfair trading relationship with a foreign entity.
His immigration plan would not only deport illegal immigrants, it would lock the golden doors to those who come to this country lawfully for opportunity, freedom, and jobs. This could hardly be further from the Reagan vision of America as a shining city on a hill.
In his latest policy manifesto, Trump writes, Decades of disastrous trade deals and immigration policies have destroyed our middle class. This influx of foreign workers, he continues, holds down salaries, keeps unemployment high, and makes it difficult for poor and working-class Americans including immigrants themselves and their children to earn a middle-class wage.
Theres some evidence that competition for jobs in very low-skilled occupations holds down wages, but for the most part immigrants fill niches in the labor market that natives cant or wont fill. Immigrants add to the overall productivity of the labor force while starting new businesses, and thus are net creators of jobs. Tech CEOs will tell you there might not be a Silicon Valley were it not for foreign talent and brainpower.
In the 1980s and 90s, the U.S. admitted nearly 20 million new legal immigrants one of the largest waves of newcomers in our nations history. Over that time period, the U.S. created nearly 40 million new jobs, the unemployment rate plunged by half, and the middle class saw living standards rise by almost one-third (between 1983 and 2005).
When Washington gets the macroeconomic policies right on taxes, trade, regulation, and the dollar economic opportunity flourishes.
Free trade is also one of these prosperity building blocks, and Trumps call for tariffs as high as 35 percent is worrisome in the extreme. We want Americans and workers all over the world to have access to the best-quality products at the lowest possible prices. This is the centuries-long economic law of comparative advantage first taught to us by David Ricardo.
Take the Ford plant in Mexico. If its more profitable for Ford to produce trucks in Mexico, fine. As the supply of Mexican trucks rises, incomes for all Mexicans go up. These same Mexicans then go out and spend their new money not just on domestic products, but on U.S. goods and services available on the market, thus building up the U.S. economy. Its win-win.
Trump is correct that there are unfair trading practices around the world. We know, for example, that China pirates U.S. technologies and patents. They counterfeit our goods. But slapping Trumps punitive tariff on imported Chinese goods would hurt America at least as much as Beijing. The same is true for rolling back Reagans NAFTA a great success. Mexico is now our second-largest export market. China is our third.
And China is our number-one import market, with Canada second and Mexico third. Do we really want to pick an economic war with them?
The U.S is the hub of the global trading system, so any lurch toward protectionism in America would give other nations an easy excuse to erect higher trade barriers. The ensuing domino effect could shut down the global trading system. No wonder financial markets are so jittery.
Trumps idea of a 35 percent tariff on imported goods would represent the biggest tax increase on U.S. consumers in modern times. This wont help the poor. Consider that Walmart has been one of the greatest anti-poverty programs in world history, achieving the everyday low prices that greatly benefit the poor and middle class in part through low-cost imports.
But trade is also vital to American jobs. A Heritage Foundation study finds that international trade has boosted annual U.S. income by at least 10 percentage points of GDP relative to what it would have been without global trade, which translates into an aggregate gain of at least $1.7 trillion in 2013, or an average gain of more than $13,600 per U.S. household per year.
Free trade is also the greatest antidote to poverty and deprivation in the worlds history. Over the past three decades, according to the World Bank and other sources, the spread of free trade has lowered abject, dollar-a-day poverty by nearly 1 billion people.
Hundreds of millions have moved upward into the middle class, primarily in China, India, broader Asia, parts of Latin America, and sub-Saharan Africa. Its a phenomenal achievement, underscoring the benefits of free trade and open markets.
To his credit, Trump accurately recites many of the terrible problems afflicting the American economy: Today, nearly 40 percent of black teenagers are unemployed. Nearly 30 percent of Hispanic teenagers are unemployed. For black Americans without high-school diplomas, the bottom has fallen out: More than 70 percent were employed in 1960, compared to less than 40 percent in 2000. Across the economy, the percentage of adults in the labor force has collapsed to a level not experienced in generations.
But the American problems that Trump complains about stagnant growth and wages and slow job growth can be sourced principally to Washington, D.C., not Beijing or Mexico City.
The solution begins with substantially cutting or even eliminating the corporate tax. After that, policymakers should stop the double taxation of multinational profits by moving to a territorial system, like everyone else in the world. Also, we need to shift to full cash expensing for new investment in plants, equipment, and building structures.
The personal tax code should then be reformed by lowering the rates, getting rid of corporate-cronyist deductions, simplifying the whole system, and ripping out tens of thousands of regulatory pages from the IRS code. In general, we prefer a flat-tax structure.
We have seen firsthand how companies from Medtronics to Burger King have fled the U.S. for lower-tax nations like China, Canada, and Ireland because U.S. tax rates are 10 and even 20 percentage points higher. This is like imposing a tariff on our own goods and services. The real victims, according to a study by the American Enterprise Institute, are American workers who earn lower wages and find fewer jobs.
Next, we need a pro-America energy policy that expands the North American shale-oil and gas revolution, ends the war on coal states, builds pipelines, allows drilling on federal lands, and greenlights the export of our vast oil and gas sources all of which will create millions of new jobs. In other words, we need the precise opposite of the Obama energy strategy.
After that we can tackle Americas massive regulatory burden think Obamacare, Sarbanes-Oxley, Dodd-Frank, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the EPA, and the National Labor Relations Board which under Republicans and Democrats has expanded exponentially the incredible maze of licenses and regulatory codes that pose a huge barrier to small new-business startups.
Finally, we need a strong and stable dollar policy that ensures that the value of tomorrows greenback will be the same as it is today. The collapse of the dollar in the 1970s and 2000s led directly to the collapse of the economy. Right now, the unstable dollar is a huge deterrent to future investment from abroad and at home. Ideally, Fed monetary policy should aim at a commodity-price rule bolstered by forward-looking, inflation-sensitive market prices.
Trump says his goal is a pro-business policy that rewards companies that invest in America, return to America, or stay and thrive in America. Let us add, create in America. The good news is that Trumps draft economic plan contains variations on most of these ideas.
And they are ideas that have worked. When they have been in place, growth has exploded. It happened under Republican Reagan and Democrat Clinton, both of whom were free traders who favored legal immigration.
Stephen Moore and Larry Kudlow are co-founders with Arthur Laffer and Steve Forbes of the Committee to Unleash Prosperity.
“Thank goodness government is going to do something about it!’
As in the Founding Fathers who wrote the Constitution and specified that the government was to be paid for by tariffs?
Now THAT’s funny.
exactly!!! I am tired of the chump trade deals we get saddled with. Traitorous trade deals. Some parties in America benefit but the USA as a whole suffers
Obviously not, since the market crash occurred a year before Smoot-Hawley was passed. Furthermore, the contraction in GDP during the Great Depression was greater than the fraction of imports/exports combined, so even if Smoot-Hawley had stopped trade in its tracks (which it didn't), it couldn't logically be the cause of the contraction either.
The fact is that the US had high protective tariffs throughout much of the 19th century, when economic growth was at its fastest.
It only makes me want to get more clarification. Trump is indeed against our trade agreements with China, since they are unbalanced. Does he really want a 35% tariff?
Hoover on the other hand was a villain because he was more of a big spending liberal than FDR was at that moment in history.
I fear you may be right, but hope you are not.
---Dennisw
I agree with this. Free Trade inside the USA is great.
Right on. It is always a mystery to me that Harding and Coolidge are not the number 1 presidents in all of US history.
Well said.
Yes, but tariffs were not punitive.
Smoot Hawley did nothing to exacerbate the Great Depression. ALL TRADE, import and export, was less than 4% of the ENTIRE GDP in the 20’s and 30’s. So cutting off all trade then could not have caused a Depression.
I hope I live long enough to see Free Traitors get the proper platform to spew their snake oil from, a gallows platform.
We will have to agree to disagree on that one.
"Whereas it is necessary for that support of government, for the discharge of the debts of the United States, and the encouragement and protection of manufactures, that duties be laid on goods, wares and merchandise:"
Those silly protectionist founding fathers. What did they know.
Yes, that was the plan all along. and a lot of money was/is made selling out your country.
Did the night butler bring you your cigar and caviar yet?
Trump should use this brilliantly succinct paragraph to begin a speech on trade.
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