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Why Is Trump a Tariff Man?


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2019 Dec 5, 8:29pm   5,794 views  70 comments

by marcus   ➕follow (6)   💰tip   ignore  

Why Is Trump a Tariff Man?

Good read for those with an open mind.

https://www.nytimes.com/2019/12/05/opinion/trump-trade-tariffs.html?action=click&module=Opinion&pgtype=Homepage

The truth is that even economists who opposed Trump’s tax cuts and tariffs are surprised by how badly they’re working out. The most commonly given explanation for these bad results is that Trumpian tariff policy is creating a lot of uncertainty, which is giving businesses a strong incentive to postpone any plans they might have for building new factories and adding jobs.

In that case, however, why doesn’t Trump do what the markets keep wrongly expecting him to do, and call it quits? His continuing tariff obsession seems especially strange given growing evidence that it’s hurting him politically.

It’s important to realize that Trumpian protectionism wasn’t a response to a groundswell of public opinion. As best as I can tell from the endless series of interviews with white guys in diners — who are, we all know, the only Americans who matter — these voters are driven more by animosity toward immigrants and the sense that snooty liberals look down on them than by trade policy.

And public opinion seems to have become far less protectionist even as Trump has raised tariffs, with the percentage of Americans saying that free trade agreements are a good thing as high as it’s ever been.

So Trump’s trade war is losing, not gaining, support. And one recent analysis finds that it was a factor hurting Republicans in the 2018 midterm elections, accounting for a significant number of lost congressional seats.

Nevertheless, Trump persists. Why?

One answer is that Trump has long had a fixation on the idea that tariffs are the answer to America’s problems, and he’s not the kind of man who reconsiders his prejudices in the light of evidence. But there’s also something else: U.S. trade law offers Trump more freedom of action — more ability to do whatever he wants — than any other policy area.

The basic story is that long ago — in fact, in the aftermath of the disastrous Smoot-Hawley tariff of 1930 — Congress deliberately limited its own role in trade policy. Instead, it gave the president the power to negotiate trade deals with other countries, which would then face up-or-down votes without amendments.

It was always clear, however, that this system needed some flexibility to respond to events. So the executive branch was given the power to impose temporary tariffs under certain conditions: import surges, threats to national security, unfair practices by foreign governments. The idea was that nonpartisan experts would determine whether and when these conditions existed, and the president would then decide whether to act.

This system worked well for many years. It turned out, however, to be extremely vulnerable to someone like Trump, for whom everything is partisan and expertise is a four-letter word. Trump’s tariff justifications have often been self-evidently absurd — seriously, who imagines that imports of Canadian steel threaten U.S. national security? But there’s no obvious way to stop him from imposing tariffs whenever he feels like it.

And there’s also no obvious way to stop his officials from granting individual businesses tariff exemptions, supposedly based on economic criteria but in fact as a reward for political support. Tariff policy isn’t the only arena in which Trump can practice crony capitalism — federal contracting is looking increasingly scandalous — but tariffs are especially ripe for exploitation.

So that’s why Trump is a Tariff Man: Tariffs let him exercise unconstrained power, rewarding his friends and punishing his enemies. Anyone imagining that he’s going to change his ways and start behaving responsibly is living in a fantasy world.

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68   marcus   2019 Dec 8, 3:19pm  

:
I can't help you with your reading comprehension.

Saying that the current economic trajectory started in 2010 or so with the first 6 years being " Obama years" says nothing about Obama being the primary causal factor.

HeadSet says
slow growth under Obama or rapid growth under Trump


Really ? You've been consuming too much right wing propaganda.
:
69   FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden   2019 Dec 13, 8:57am  

They have no stake in the future. None. They are fucked up, they suicide their kids by pushing tranny/gay shit onto them. They don’t care about future, only chasing hedonistic pleasures and harassing normal people because that gives them sadistic joy.

Goran_K says
zzyzzx says
Why do you support communist slave labor from a country that doesn't care about the environment?

Still waiting on an answer for this one.


Because most lefty assholes would rather we weaken the US economy and even go into a recession so "Trump loses".

Fucking fags.
70   EBGuy   2019 Dec 13, 5:43pm  

marcus says
Not worth it though, if it were to lead to world war.

We're already fighting the Third Opium War.

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