Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Jones Act and politics

- BLOOMBERG VIEW

Who actually benefits from the Jones Act, the 1920 law stipulatin­g that all maritime commerce between U.S. ports has to take place on ships that are built, owned and crewed by Americans?

The American Maritime Partnershi­p, a lobbying group, will tell you that the act supports nearly half a million jobs and each year generates $10 billion in taxes and $46 billion in additional U.S. output. Even if you take these statistics at face value, they fail to allow for the jobs, taxes and output lost in the rest of the economy.

What about the act’s stated purpose— which, together with other laws such as the 1936 Merchant Marine Act, is to ensure that the U.S. retains a robust merchant marine and advanced maritime sector for domestic commerce and times of war or crisis? That’s no more persuasive, once you note the steady decline of shipbuildi­ng and the U.S. ocean-going fleet over the past five decades.

In truth, the Jones Act survives because narrow commercial interests want it to. A protection­ist thicket has long surrounded U.S. commercial shipping and shipbuildi­ng. It has gradually hardened into a political wall impervious to economic reason. President Donald Trump spoke the truth in September: When asked whether he would waive the act for Puerto Rico, he said the U.S. has “a lot of people that work in the shipping industry that don’t want the Jones Act lifted.”

Those people are backed by a flotilla of senators and representa­tives who are failing to put the broader interests of voters first.

The arithmetic of special-interest pleading is interestin­g. Consider New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker, whose $31,000 from sea transport groups put him in the top 20 of Senate recipients in 2014. That winter, he blasted state officials for failing to lay in salt for clearing roads. Without the Jones Act, an available foreign-flag ship could have transporte­d the salt from Maine for $500,000; using slower U.S. barges caused delay, and cost the state $1.2 million. Booker and his fellow senator Robert Menendez, who had unsuccessf­ully sought a Jones Act waiver, then chided those who “recklessly” called for the act’s abolition.

Nothing seems more perverse, though, than the vocal support given to the Jones Act by the congressio­nal delegation­s of Alaska and Hawaii. Consumers in states held hostage to relatively expensive U.S. seaborne commerce are the act’s biggest losers. Maritime industries drive neither economy: In both Alaska and Hawaii, shipbuildi­ng and repair provided well under 0.5 percent of employment, labor income and output in 2013. Nonetheles­s, the Jones Act lobby has been a reliable horn of campaign plenty: In 2016, Hawaii’s senators and two representa­tives ranked in the top 20 recipients of sea-transport campaign contributi­ons, as did Alaska’s two senators.

Those dollars help to get Jones Act-friendly candidates re-elected. They do less than nothing for the voters of those states and the country as a whole.

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