On Trade Deficits and Tarriffs

PART I: Trade Balances are Worse than Useless

Let's imagine there are only three countries: the US, Canada and Mexico.

Let's further imagine that these three countries produce and consume all the goods and

services that they need locally except for three situations:

1) The US buys lumber from Canada

2) Canada buys steel from Mexico

3) Mexico buys automobiles from the US

Now, the trade balances will go like this:

US: In a trade deficit with Canada that just gets bigger and bigger.

US: In a trade surplus with Mexico that just gets bigger and bigger.

These trade balances don't mean anything. Nothing is out of whack. There is no limit

to how high they can go, and nothing ever needs to be paid back to anybody (it is not

debt).

Therefore I recommend ignoring trade balances entirely. They are a silly useless

metric that causes far too much confusion (including in Trump's mind).

PART II: Trade is win-win

In free markets, people trade with other people only of their own free will. They are

never compelled to make a specific trade. Therefore we can assume that both parties to

a trade doing so willingly actually value the received goods and services moreso than

they value the disposed of goods and services.

Therefore trade is win-win.

Therefore,.the more free trade that occurs, the richer everybody gets.

PART III: Tariffs and their purpose

Tarriffs are local import taxes you charge your own citizens in order to protect

local industries who produce the same products at a higher price. This may be

necessary for a number of different reasons:

1) Local industry is fledgling and not efficient yet, and you are giving them time to improve

2) Currency exchange rates are out of whack from purchasing-power-parity, and so you are

preventing efficient local industry from suffering the devastation of this artificial

imbalance.

Any other reason for imposing tarriffs causes a net loss since as already argued, trade

is win-win.

Trump may impose tarriffs in order to drive a hard bargain, but they are still a net loss

while they last. It is just that in Trump's case, they generally don't last long, they

were more of a threat than a long-term policy.

Since currency exchange rates change rapidly, I am of the opinion that tariffs should

change rapidly too. But they don't. Generally they are written into legislation and hard

to change quickly. IMHO government could do far better in this regard.

related...

I don't agree with Jeffrey Sachs' Keynesian bail out beliefs. But this quote I think is useful:

"Unfortunately there is a basic point that Donald Trump confuses, I'm sorry to say. He thinks that when the US runs a trade defecit with other countries, that's because other countries are doing something unfair to the US in trade. But the truth is what a trade defecit means is that you're spending more than you are producing, that's all it means. So it would be like you are maxing out on your credit card, buying from all the stores in your city, and then accusing those stores of mistreating you because you're running a trade defecit with those stores. This is the ironic situation right now that yes, the US has a large trade defecit. The reason is that we consume a lot. One of the reasons that we consume a lot is that our government runs an enormous defecit, nearly 7% of our national income. Because we are consuming a lot, it's like we are running down all our credit cards and then we're blaming those that are selling to us as though they are doing something unfair to us. So there's a very basic mistake in analysis right now unfortunately right now that's having huge ramifications for the world, but it's unfortunately it's macroeconomics 101 which I taught for many many years at Harvard and Columbia University and it's just not understood properly in the senior reaches of the US government."

- Jeffrey Sachs on Judge Napolitano's Judging Freedom

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6n0iD_xRFjg

IMHO you can run down your credit cards and then devalue the dollar and not have to pay back as much. Or you can declare war and not pay it back at all. Immoral, but strategic. And China is clearly watching for this and positioning to avoid the worst outcomes.

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😂😂😂😂

I WAS GONNA PASTE THAT VERY QUOTE. LOL

IT IS TRUE IN PART

BUT IS ALSO TRUE THAT SOME COUNTRIES, LIKE CHINA CAN OFFER PRODUCTS AT MUCH LOWER PRICES BECAUSE OF INHUMANE EXPLOITATION OF THE WORKFORCE. SO THEY ARE DOING SOMETHING UNFAIR AS THEY DO NOT PLAY BY THE SAME RULES.

TARIFFS CAN BE A WAY TO LEVEL THE PLAYING FIELD.