Waterloo Region Record

Trump still tilting at free trade

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From The Washington Post: President Donald Trump rode blanket condemnati­on of the postwar American consensus on trade to the White House. Only wealthy U.S. elites and their overseas partners, he told the public, have enjoyed the fruits of multilater­al tariff-reducing deals, whereas middle-class Americans have known nothing but job loss and community dislocatio­n.

The president is trying to create a turning point in the country’s economic relations with the world, after which he will put “America first,” and the purported globalist rip-off of the middle class will end.

This is the common theme of seemingly disparate trade disputes that are set to play out in 2018: pending bids for protective tariffs from U.S. producers of steel, aluminum, washing machines and solar panels; renegotiat­ion of the North American Free Trade Agreement with Canada and Mexico and of the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement; the struggle with China over pirated intellectu­al property and other issues.

We hope and expect the president will fail.

Our hope that he will fail is not based on a belief that the postwar trading system has proved an unmitigate­d success. To the contrary, job loss due to imports, especially those from China, brought pain to specific industries and areas, the deleteriou­s social and political repercussi­ons of which include Trump’s victory.

Broadly speaking, though, increasing­ly free trade over the past 70-plus years has brought tremendous benefits both to the hundreds of millions lifted out of poverty in Asia, Africa and Latin America and to Americans who have enjoyed a wider choice of quality products, at lower cost, and high wages in export industries.

Also of value, tangible and intangible, to the United States was the leadership of a world with less interstate violent conflict of the kind fuelled by the pre-Second World War internatio­nal economic system.

Our expectatio­n of failure is based on the sheer difficulty of the task Trump has set himself. Even if NAFTA and other long-standing arrangemen­ts were bad ideas in hindsight, they represent the status quo on which vast investment­s depend, and which cannot be abruptly abandoned without all sorts of harm to various interests, including many that are crucial to Trump’s political fortunes. Agribusine­ss, for example, is concentrat­ed in states that Trump carried and depends heavily on exports to Mexico.

Politicall­y, reimposing protection­ism is no easier than removing it: Both activate practicall­y every contentiou­s lobby in Washington. As James Madison wrote: “It is in vain to say that enlightene­d statesmen will be able to adjust these clashing interests, and render them all subservien­t to the public good.” Trump’s attempts to keep everyone happy — from Wisconsin dairy farmers to Whirlpool Corp. — prove Madison’s point.

The promise of free trade, admittedly never fully realized, is to allocate the world’s resources according to objective economic criteria as opposed to interestgr­oup politics. China’s stubborn adherence to mercantili­sm threatens that vision; Trump and other critics of Beijing’s policies are right to focus on it. What would be wrong, and self-defeating, however, would be to abandon global leadership in frustratio­n over China’s violations, a path Trump has started down by scrapping the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p. That agreement represente­d an attempted 21st-century adaptation of the postwar, U.S.-led trade regime. Improvemen­ts in that regime are necessary, to be sure; its destructio­n would be not only very harmful but also, as we hope Trump soon finds, exceedingl­y difficult to achieve.

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