Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

On trade, Trump’s aide: Gap saps U. S.

- PAUL WISEMAN AND CHRISTOPHE­R S. RUGABER

WASHINGTON — Reducing America’s huge trade deficits would deliver stronger economic growth and improve national security, the White House trade adviser said in a speech that underscore­d the Trump administra­tion’s harsh view of recent U. S. trade policies.

Speaking at a National Associatio­n of Business Economics conference, Peter Navarro argued Monday that China and other trading partners use the proceeds from export sales to buy U. S. companies and technology, reducing America’s self- reliance. He said, for example, that only one U. S. company is capable of repairing the propellers on Navy submarines.

“Might we lose a broader cold war for America’s freedom and prosperity, not by shots fired but by cash registers ringing?” Navarro said. “Might we lose a broader hot war, simply because we have sent our manufactur­ing and defense industrial base offshore?”

President Donald Trump named Navarro, a University

of California- Irvine economist, to lead a new White House council on trade. The appointmen­t signaled Trump’s intention to shake up relations with China. Navarro is a sharp critic of Chinese economic and military policies.

Navarro’s views on the trade deficit stand in stark contrast with mainstream economists, a difference he seemed to relish in his remarks. Most economists see trade deficits as an outcome of a nation spending more than it saves, rather than the result of bad trade deals. They worry that the measures pushed by Navarro,

such as higher tariffs, would raise prices for imports of consumer goods such as clothes, toys and electronic­s. They also warn that it could spark retaliator­y measures that would harm U. S. exports.

Navarro on Monday said mainstream economists underestim­ated the damage caused by large trade deficits. Last year, the United States exported $ 1.45 trillion in goods and imported $ 2.19 trillion, creating a trade deficit of more than $ 734 billion in goods, almost half of it with China.

He said the Trump administra­tion would reduce trade deficits by negotiatin­g better trade agreements and reducing corporate tax rates and regulation­s to make American

companies more competitiv­e.

Navarro waved away the argument that cracking down on imported goods would raise prices for American consumers. He said “modest inflation” would be a worthwhile price to pay for saving and creating U. S. jobs.

“This seems to be an elitist out- of- touch argument, as it assumes that the poorest segments of our society would rather have cheap products than a good job and a good paycheck,” he said.

Navarro described his job as leading a “SWAT team” in the White House that helps U. S. companies contend with unfair trade practices abroad and burdensome regulation­s at home.

His remarks also sketched

out the full ambition of Trump’s trade policies. For example, Navarro said the administra­tion wants to encourage more companies to make or source their parts in the United States, rather than simply assembling foreign made parts in the U. S.

“One of the major goals of the Trump administra­tion is to reclaim all of the supply chain and manufactur­ing capabiliti­es that would otherwise exist if the playing field were level,” Navarro said.

Yet this could be a tall order: Many large U. S. corporatio­ns source parts from dozens of countries around the world, a result of decisions made over decades. Boeing, for example, uses parts from 90 countries.

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