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The Trade Wars: How Trump's And Biden's Policies Match Up
Real Clear Wire ^ | 06/17/24 | Jonathan Draeger

Posted on 06/17/2024 8:49:53 PM PDT by SeekAndFind

One of the defining features of former President Trump’s 2016 presidential campaign was his – at least at the time – unorthodox opinions on trade. With the notable exception of Bernie Sanders, the other candidates parroted the longstanding bipartisan consensus on free trade. Trump promoted protectionist policies and tariffs.

We can’t continue to allow China to rape our country, and that’s what they’re doing. It’s the greatest theft in the history of the world,” Trump said at a 2016 campaign rally in Fort Wayne, Indiana. In his remarks on the campaign trail, you could hear echoes of his interviews from the 1980s, where he aired his frustration with how the United States handled trade, specifically regarding Japan and the Middle East. “I think a lot of people are tired of watching other countries ripping of the United States” he said. “This is a great country. [Other nations] laugh at us behind our back, they laugh at us because of our own stupidity.”

Now his protectionist views have become mainstream. President Biden recently imposed a fresh set of tariffs on China, including 25% on steel, aluminum, batteries, ship-to-shore cranes, and some medical products, 50% on semiconductors and solar cells, and 100% on electric vehicles.

Before Trump came along, the prevailing wisdom on trade was that free trade and low-to-no tariffs was the best policy to bolster the global economy, including that of the United States. The North American Free Trade Agreement was first envisioned by Ronald Reagan, introduced by George H.W. Bush, and signed into law by Bill Clinton. Ross Perot objected vociferously to NAFTA, but he finished third in 1992 and 1996, and the issue was settled – or so it seemed, based on the presidents who followed Clinton.

Reading from George W. Bush’s trade representative Robert Zoellick’s 2001 trade agenda, the primary focus was building “a new consensus to promote open markets for trade in the decades to come.” Barack Obama’s 2009 agenda focused slightly more on workers’ rights and the environment, but still prioritized free trade: “Free and fair trade with a proper regard for social and environmental goals and appropriate political accountability will be a powerful contributor to the national and global well-being.”

Departing from the previous mantra, however, both Donald Trump and Joe Biden have made the goal of their trade policies increased domestic production and jobs for working-class Americans. Trump trade representative Robert Lighthizer highlighted this in 2017, saying the focus of their trade policy would be to help everyday people: “By expanding export market access through negotiating good trade deals and enforcing U.S. trade laws, we can raise wages and help level the playing field for American workers, farmers, ranchers, and job-creators.”

The Biden administration has carried a similar tune. In line with the working-class appeals of the “Build Back Better” approach to growing the economy, United States trade representative Katherine Tai said at the start of her tenure she would pursue “a worker-centered trade policy.”

Differences in Trade Policy

Although Trump and Biden largely agree on the objectives of trade policy, their specific policies differ. The first difference is the Biden administration’s focus on equity and environmental issues. Unlike Trump’s 2017 agenda, which exclusively prioritized U.S. strength, the U.S. economy, and protecting U.S. sovereignty, Biden’s also included the pillar of “building sustainable infrastructure and a clean energy future.”

Although there haven’t been any sweeping regulations that enforce this pillar, this has come into play with policies such as “green public procurement,” which outlined “best practices” to promote “sustainable and green solutions.” Some examples they suggested included “building buildings for net-zero emissions and increasing water and energy efficiency” and “pilot programs for carbon pollution-free electricity.”

The other primary difference between the two presidents’ policies on trade is the extent and particulars of their tariffs. Former president of the National Foreign Trade Council William Reinsch told RealClearPolitics the difference between the two is that Trump is “using an ax and Biden’s using a scalpel.”

Specifically, he was referring to Trump’s sweeping 2018 and 2019 tariffs on China, which affected $380 billion worth of goods. In addition to these tariffs, Trump has floated the idea of a 10% tariff on all imports and a 60% tariff on all Chinese goods if he is elected for a second term. Andrew Hale, the Heritage Foundation’s senior policy analyst in trade policy, told RCP that he thinks these 10% tariffs on all goods are just “election trail bravado that will be dialed back if he returns to the White House,” since others, namely Lighthizer, have not indicated support for tariffs on all goods.

The Biden administration has used a more focused approach, with recently announced tariffs affecting only $18 billion worth of Chinese imports. The press release announcing the tariffs said they were put on specific goods because “China’s unfair trade practices concerning technology transfer, intellectual property, and innovation are threatening American businesses and workers.”

This policy differs from Trump’s tariffs on most Chinese exports, focusing instead on specific goods made using unfair trade practices. This goods-based approach, former lead economist in the Office of Tax Policy under the Biden administration Kimberly Clausing told RCP, is “much more narrowly targeted” than Trump’s trade policy, which she characterized as “protectionism without any restraint.”

Effects of Policies

Clausing also questioned the degree to which Trump’s tariffs helped U.S. workers. Although the unemployment rate in the manufacturing industry went down marginally, from 4.2% in January 2017 to 3.4% in January 2020, the U.S. trade deficit increased from around $516 billion in 2017 to $559 billion in 2019. The tariffs did coincide with a small decrease in the trade deficit with China, falling from around $375 billion in 2017 to $342 billion in 2019, but by 2022 it had risen again to $382 billion, even though Biden did not remove most of the Trump tariffs.

Experts say the tariffs might not have had the intended long-term effects due to a variety of factors. Clausing pointed to retaliatory tariffs put in place by China, such as their 2018 25% tariff on $50 billion worth of goods, which decreased U.S. exports to China. Therefore, although imports from China decreased, exports to China also decreased, leaving the trade balance with China largely unchanged. William Reinsch also told RCP that China employed tactics to avoid the tariffs, such as sending steel to Vietnam or Korea, and then “substantially transforming” the steel into wire, for example, so it wouldn’t be subject to the U.S. tariff on Chinese steel.

Biden’s recent tariffs haven’t escaped criticism either. Scott Lincicome, vice president of general economics at the libertarian-leaning Cato Institute, criticized the tariffs on environmental goods such as EVs, saying that the increased prices of these goods “deters the administration’s own environmental objectives.” Lincicome also critiqued the idea of tariffs more generally, saying that the industries “protected” by tariffs don’t use the added profits from higher prices to become “hyper innovative and efficient” but just tend to “pocket the win, and then when tariffs or subsidies are going to disappear, go back to Washington and lobby for more of them.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: policy; tariffs; trade

1 posted on 06/17/2024 8:49:53 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

I tend to favor a financially balanced motor vehicle trade and domestic manufacture of all simple items.

Millions of people need cheap cars (and subject to financial balance to prevent federal debt growth beyond the nation’s ability to repay in honestly valued money) they should be able to buy them.

Domestic manufacture of all simple items means the nation would be able to employ millions and retain a strong industrial capability.

It is stupid to pay Chinese in China $2 to save twelve cents in industrial wages that must be made up with $1 in welfare costs.


2 posted on 06/17/2024 9:14:45 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: SeekAndFind

“negotiating good trade deals”

I doubt one has been negotiated since the 1850s.

“level the playing field for American workers, farmers, ranchers, and job-creators”

The playing field will never be level since there are millions of people who would work for less than half what you would barely accept, but the cash flows must be fairly equal.

Economists and bankers are generally thought to be stupid for good reasons.


3 posted on 06/17/2024 9:23:47 PM PDT by Brian Griffin
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To: Brian Griffin
Decades ago when the educational establishment still pretended to be data rather than ideology driven, a book was published entitled, Politics: Who Gets What Where and When.

The point was that politics should be understood as the clashing of competing interests to win a share of the spoils. A laissez-faire approach to the economy would prevent the government from shaping the economy, or its own spending, to favor one political group over another. Similarly, a pure libertarian would have international trade as "free" trade in which competing interests would fight it out without government regulations and the more efficient producer would win market share.

Whether for good or ill, we have not now and indeed never have had a pure laissez-faire approach to the economy nor have we had unfettered free trade. Our colonial and revolutionary history can be understood as a contest between sections in continental America and in revolt against British mercantilism. These competing interests have contended against each other ever since.

Lincoln imposed a federal income tax in 1862 to pay for the Civil War but the constitutional amendment under Woodrow Wilson in 1913 created a ravenous beast that funneled so much of America's wealth through Washington DC that it became inevitable that rent seekers and social engineers would have the funds and the power to move the country entirely away from any relationship to a laissez-faire system. Lyndon Johnson accelerated the process and government regulation in the marketplace has now become the standard way that we determine who gets what, where and when.

Similarly, free trade has given way to "fair" trade. The ideal that the most efficient producer would provide goods and services at the cheapest price has been superseded by other social engineering values. We see this in the language in this article.

For example, "U.S. trade laws, we can raise wages and help level the playing field for American workers, farmers, ranchers, and job-creators.”

"In line with the working-class appeals of the “Build Back Better” approach to growing the economy, United States trade representative Katherine Tai said at the start of her tenure she would pursue “a worker-centered trade policy.”

" Biden administration’s focus on equity and environmental issues."

While the government is busy dictating how we should conduct internal and external commerce, we at least had an understanding that we must successfully lobby for our share or perish. We competed against others according to a series of acceptable features that advocates of one position or another sought to impress upon the public, or at least successfully lobby legislators and regulators, to favor the advocates' interests.

But politicians, if nothing else, are infinitely wily and capable of crafting new overarching themes which can utterly change the way policies affect who gets what, where and when.

For example, the American South was quite inventive in justifying slavery. But today, after we have deplored this slavery and died to end it, there seems to be very little interest in affecting trade relations with China because of the slavery of Muslims there.

An overarching theme of "climate change" has swept away much of the traditional matrix in which we fashion our trade policy. It has long been clear that climate change can be exploited to dominate our internal policies.

So when Trump undertook to change American posture on the trade with China and elsewhere he was introducing a new theme that would radically change the way we did business. The degree to which he was unsuccessful might well be accounted for by the fact that he was conducting a mini revolution that had not entirely found its footing.

I would argue that Trump was twice impeached and multiple times indicted because it was his trade policies, even more than his domestic policies, that posed an existential threat to established interests. In other words, in attacking Chinese mercantilism on behalf of American national security and American national prosperity, especially manufacturing, he was breaking a lot of rice bowls.

The likes of Mitch McConnell, who should've been supporting his party's President, found it as easy as did southern slaveholders to rationalize opposition to Trump because McConnell's marital status gained him a relationship with a worldwide Chinese shipping company. We have not seen even the tip of the iceberg of the sorted corruption between our legislators and China. Nor have we seen the full extent of the corruption between Hollywood, academia and so many vital parts of America and China.

In all these industries rice bowls were threatened by Trump.

When we as conservatives ponder our proper position respecting trade, whether fair or free, we should do so knowing that trade, no less than domestic politics, has much to do with who gets what, where and when.


4 posted on 06/18/2024 1:07:18 AM PDT by nathanbedford (Attack, repeat, attack! - Bull Halsey)
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To: nathanbedford

Sorted = sordid


5 posted on 06/18/2024 1:43:03 AM PDT by nathanbedford (Attack, repeat, attack! - Bull Halsey)
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To: SeekAndFind

Trumps policies were ver simple.

He offered reciprocity in all trade, and if it was refused, then tariffs would be imposed on imports.

Very simple and very effective. Its the way the syste should work.

BUt the Biudens and Des....theyu take huge bribes for trade concessions.OUr country is the raped as Trump stated.

The Dems hate the word “reciprocity.” They want the grift to continue.


6 posted on 06/18/2024 3:02:36 AM PDT by Candor7 (Ask not for whom the Trump Trolls,He trolls for thee!),<img src="" width=500</img><a href="">tag</a>)
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To: SeekAndFind
I have never met a tax I liked and I never met a tariff I didn't like.

PS: Free Trade ( one-sided ) is unnorthodox and radical. Tariffs are the traditional way for the USA to raise revenue.

7 posted on 06/18/2024 3:06:07 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: Brian Griffin
I tend to favor a financially balanced motor vehicle trade

How gloBULList of you.

8 posted on 06/18/2024 3:07:05 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: SeekAndFind

There are only three ways any nation can CREATE wealth. They are mining, manufacturing and agriculture. The most “value added” comes from manufacturing.


9 posted on 06/18/2024 3:14:06 AM PDT by central_va (I won't be reconstructed and I do not give a damn...)
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To: AdmSmith; AnonymousConservative; Arthur Wildfire! March; Berosus; Bockscar; BraveMan; cardinal4; ...

10 posted on 06/18/2024 5:38:30 AM PDT by SunkenCiv (Putin should skip ahead to where he kills himself in the bunker.)
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To: central_va

Is that a reason the South lost? They were for total Free Trade.


11 posted on 06/18/2024 11:31:29 AM PDT by cowboyusa (YESHUA IS KING AMERICA, AND HE WILL HAVE NO OTHER GODS BEFORE HIM!)
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