Posted on 12/07/2016 8:34:45 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Thank goodness for Kevin McCarthy! isnt something one says every day, but in the matter of President-elect Donald J. Trumps backward and destructive plan to resurrect 19th-century tariffs, the gentleman from California is invaluable.
Trump wants to impose 35 percent tariffs on . . . somebody. He does not seem quite sure. One of the reasons for that is that Trump has the question of trade deficits mixed up in his head with the question of offshoring and, like most Americans, he does not understand either of them very well.
The president-elect, writing on Facebook (because thats what presidents-elect do now), insisted: Any business that leaves our country for another country, fires its employees, builds a new factory or plant in the other country, and then thinks it will sell its product back into the U.S. . . . without retribution or consequence, is WRONG! (Eccentric punctuation and capitalization the president-elects.) There will be a tax on our soon to be strong border of 35 percent for these companies wanting to sell their product, cars, A.C. units etc., back across the border.
Pretty tough talk for a guy who just oversaw a multi-million-dollar corporate-welfare giveaway to Carrier as his first semi-official act.
It is not clear that the federal government even has the power to do what Trump proposes to lay on a punitive tax based on offshoring decisions, as opposed to laying on a general tariff but Representative McCarthy has made it clear that congressional Republicans are not much inclined to follow Trump down that particular rabbit hole, preferring to work on such less exotic measures as corporate tax reform that would make investing in the United States a more attractive proposition.
Of course, investing in the United States already is a very attractive proposition, which is almost everybody gets this wrong the main reason why we have trade deficits.
Trade deficits are partly a question of consumer preference American consumers really do like Hondas more than Japanese consumers like Buicks but they are not mainly a question of consumer preference. They are mainly a question of investor preference and investors prefer the United States, which is why there is almost twice as much foreign direct investment in the United States as in China, even though Chinas economy has grown at a much faster rate over the past 20 years.
It works like this: Almost every advanced country does a great deal of international trade. They have lots of imports and exports because it is easier to grow sugar in Florida than it is in Norway and more efficient to sew T-shirts in Bangladesh than it is in Switzerland. When Walmart orders $1 million worth of flip-flops from a Chinese concern, those Chinese gentlemen receive 1 million delicious U.S. dollars, which they are very happy and grateful to have. But what can you do with U.S. dollars? You can buy stuff from U.S. companies or you can buy assets from sellers who take U.S. dollars, which ultimately means U.S.-based investments. (This is true even when you add in all of the real-world complications such as foreign exchange.) If you are that flip-flop entrepreneur in China, you probably have a very high rate of savings, which is normal for people in poor, backward, and unstable countries. There is lots of uncertainty in a place like China, and having a whole lot of savings especially dollar-denominated assets is a rational response to that.
But it isnt only the Chinese. The Japanese, the British, the Germans and the other Europeans, the Canadians, the Mexicans, and practically everybody else in the world with a little bit of coin to invest likes to buy American assets. And why wouldnt they? The American economy is the most wondrous thing human beings have ever managed to do, and all it takes to get yourself a piece of it is a few greenbacks.
The mystery isnt why so many foreigners want to invest in U.S. assets but why Americans invest so little.
Trade deficits dont happen because the wily Japanese juke us on trade policy. They happen because intelligent people holding a fistful of dollars very often decide to forgo the consumption of American consumer goods in order to invest in American assets. In economics terms, what this means is that the trade deficit is a mirror image of the capital surplus. A capital surplus isnt necessarily an unalloyed good (everything in economics is about tradeoffs), but it is a pretty nice thing to have around if you are, say, an entrepreneur looking to build a new facility in Houston or Jacksonville and looking for some investors to stake you.
If the economists are correct and trade deficits are mainly driven by investment preferences rather than consumer preferences, what would a big Trumpkin tariff actually do? Daniel Griswold of Cato considered the case back during the 1990s trade panic: Slapping higher tariffs on imports will only deprive foreigners of the dollars they would have earned by selling in the U.S. market. This, in turn, will reduce the supply of dollars on the international currency market, raise the value of the dollar relative to other currencies and make dollar-priced U.S. exports more expensive for foreign buyers, thus reducing demand for our exports. Eventually the volume of exports will fall along with imports, and the trade deficit will remain largely unchanged.
The trade deficit might remain unchanged, but there would be a large cost attached: Without that foreign investment capital flowing into the United States, money gets more expensive. That means entrepreneurs have a harder time raising capital.
Having a fat taxman and starving entrepreneurs is not a model for prosperity the opposite is.
One of the problems, I suspect, is that people hear the word deficit and they think of the trade deficit as being like the budget deficit, i.e. a mounting debt that one day will have to be paid. It is something closer to the opposite: We get more stuff in return for the stuff we sell, and we get cheap investment capital on top of that. Foreigners get access to a dynamic economy with a stable government (miraculously stable, considering the jackasses in charge of it) and a stable currency. Everybody benefits.
But of course everybody benefits: Trade does not happen between countries (which is why trade deficits are kind of a mirage, anyway, a chimera of aggregation) but between buyers and sellers, each of whom stands to gain from the exchange if it were otherwise, the exchange would not happen. Thats the really nifty thing about voluntary exchange.
Someone should explain this to the president-elect, assuming it is possible to explain things to him.
Kevin D. Williamson is National Reviews roving correspondent.
The US economy has benefited immensely by the respect for property rights and the safety of investments from illegal seizure guaranteed by law and the US Constitution. Foreigners be they corporations or individuals with surplus wealth wish to have their real assets in dollars, dollar denominated investments or real estate. As a result of political and economic instability in the EU,the Mideast and Asia Huge amounts of foreign capital have greatly supported the US economy. Prime American real estate has skyrocketed as foreigners invest heavily. American equity and bond markets have grown with huge amounts of transferred foreign capital. Sadly little of this capital has been put into new job creating endeavors. Without this foreign transfer, Obama’s economy would have collapsed.
Will an angry, pauperized population support the Constitution instead of socialism? You need to think this through a bit more.
Lost me when I saw: Kevin Williamson. A fervent anti-Trump chump.
But but, THEY TOOK OUR JERBS!!!
National Review has been anti-Trump and anti-Worker for forever. And Kevin McCarthy is that typical “conservative legislator” who is a frickin’ wuss when bending over for democrats, but with his buddy Paul Ryan, has suddenly found an opposition voice....to their own candidate Donald Trump.
They gave Obama everything. They never fought him on anything. But, now they’re prepared to engage in battle with Trump over Trump’s determination to put America, American jobs, and American workers first.
And National Review, also establishment attack rat against Trump, is the little weasel thing that cackled from the lap of Jabba the Hut. If they would only strangle on their own self serving words.
Let’s say it again. There is no such thing as a free market. It is an ideal type. It is a fantasy. It is a term that imagines a fairy dust that results in everyone getting along, playing by ‘the rules’, being honest, and ignoring opportunities to put their finger on the scale of “free and balanced”. IOW, it doesn’t exist.
Tariffs are designed to rebalance those scales.
Let’s repeat what Steve Moore said the other day on FBN: the US taxes its own exports and does not tax imports.
Foreign countries manipulate currencies, construct impediments, obfuscate, lie, steal, cheat and kill.
And we call that a “free market”.
I find it humorous that the libertarian minded, right-wing hippies keep talking about this ‘investment’ without ever specifying exactly where it goes, as though they have completely forgotten about the Austrian School’s warnings about mal-investment.
NR has always been the bastion of “free traitors”, hence their undying support of Cruz.
Their version of conservatism is dead.
Finally.
This article completely ignores the reason why it’s cheaper to make things in China. The US has too many regulations tying us down and we have things such as child labor laws. Fair trade is critical. If we are going to have child labor laws then we need to only trade with other countries that have similar child labor laws or impose a tariff. That’s the easiest way to implement tariffs that people will get behind and back. And at the same time deregulate a ton of the garbage we put on our businesses via the EPA and other federal agencies. Finally, change the tax code so that people pay the tax and not the businesses. People ultimately pay for it anyway...taxing the business is just a way to hide taxes from the people. If we tax the people then they may actually care to control gov’t spending.
I don't this particular globalist puke, but his level of intellectual dishonesty is right up there with CNN and the commie Democrats.
Americans can't invest in America mainly because their investment capital is stolen in the form of taxes, regulations, licenses, fees, environmentalism, and hordes of other tyrannical anti-American policies, most of which are fully supported by the globalist RINOs.
American citizens need three times the start-up capital for any sort of business here than an immigrant would need for the same sort of business.
“Someone should explain this to the president-elect, assuming it is possible to explain things to him.”
Someone should explain to the anti-Trump chumps that elections have consequences, assuming it is possible to explain things to the elitists a-holes at NR.
Only the butt hurt Never Trumpers.
Please contribute to the new Trump charity to help the NR thugs and Never Trumpers on Free Republic in deep butt hurt!
What is National Review? Is that like the MSNBC of weekly magazines?
I think what he is trying to say is that the globalists aren’t finished squeezing us until there is nothing left. Then we won’t have “excess capital”.
I care about the long term strength of the US Constitution. I do not care about trade deficits and their impacts on semi-skilled middle class Americans.
What was the point of the Constitution but to empower and promoter that same semi-skills middle class what was the country at that time...
This is one of the dumbest people on Earth.
So uncontrolled immigration is good for the long term strength of the Constitution?
Of course foreign purchase of businesses is also good for the long term strength of the Constitution.
Yes, why care about those low skilled Americans, when we can have high paid positions going to H1B visa holders, who are displacing those low skilled Americans. Also fantastic for the long term strength of the Constitution.
One reason foreigners want to invest so much in U.S. assets is that the U.S. dollar is so much more stable than their own currency. People and institutions in the U.S. have a much different approach to investing because the U.S. dollar IS their own currency.
However he does understand loss of jobs has impoverished the middle class. Does McCarthy understand that?
“When Walmart orders $1 million worth of flip-flops from a Chinese concern, those Chinese gentlemen receive 1 million delicious U.S. dollars, which they are very happy and grateful to have. But what can you do with U.S. dollars? You can buy stuff from U.S. companies or you can buy assets from sellers who take U.S. dollars, which ultimately means U.S.-based investments.”
What kind of assets?
US Treasuries
Real Estate
Entire Factories
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