Boston Herald

Trump notching trade victories

- By STEPHEN MOORE Stephen Moore is a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

Is it possible that Donald Trump is winning on trade?

Last week, Trump apparently delivered two underappre­ciated victories as a result of his threat of stiff tariffs and renegotiat­ed trade deals.

First, Seoul has agreed to reduce long-standing nontariff trade barriers that have reduced American exports to Korea. Though the details are still sketchy, the Koreans have agreed to buy more Ford and General Motors Co. cars and trucks and other U.S.-made products. This can only be good news for American workers. The Koreans have also agreed to increase reimbursem­ent rates to American drug and vaccine producers.

Even The New York Times grudgingly conceded that the deal “represents the type of one-on-one agreement that Mr. Trump says makes the best sense for American companies and workers.”

Also in recent days, China appeared to stand down in response to Trump’s jarring announceme­nt of a record $50 billion of tariffs on Chinese products. Premier Li Keqiang pledged to improve American companies’ access to Chinese markets. He also said in a news conference that China would treat foreign and domestic firms equally. And what’s more, Beijing has promised that it would stop forcing foreign firms to transfer technology to China and would strengthen intellectu­al property rights enforcemen­t. That was a smart and encouragin­g response.

But then on Monday, Beijing appeared to reverse course. China announced new tariffs of up to 25 percent on $3 billion of American pork, nuts, fruits and other exports. China has made it no secret that it is aiming tariffs at areas of the country that voted for Trump.

So what will it be with China? Concession­s or retaliatio­n?

If it is going to be retaliatio­n, this story won’t end well for China’s economy. Trump is a counterpun­cher. He also doesn’t back down. If China wants unfettered access to American markets, it is going to have to buy a lot more of our exports, not less.

Trump also commands the moral high ground in this dispute. You can’t have free trade with a country that steals hundreds of billions of dollars and arms your enemies. Period. A country that acts this way is an adversary, not an ally.

Beijing’s actions on Monday are the response of a belligeren­t teenager who gets called out for bad behavior. How many millions of Chinese workers will lose their jobs if Beijing surrenders access to America’s multitrill­ion-dollar consumer market?

Trump’s message has been clear from day one: There is a new trade sheriff in town.

Trump once explained his strategy on trade to me during a meeting at Trump Tower: “I am not a protection­ist, and I am not an isolationi­st. Of course, I understand the benefits of internatio­nal trade. I’m a businessma­n. I just want better and fairer trade deals that benefit America.” That’s the card he’s playing with China. Americans — especially in the Midwestern states whose products and workers China wants to punish — are generally behind Trump all the way.

The risk here is great. Trump may upend three decades of progress in opening markets for internatio­nal trade. This has benefited Americans in the form of lower prices for nearly everything. The White House may be risking another 1930s-style tariff war, which shut down global trade and cratered the world economy into depression. No one wants that.

But the status quo on trade with China is untenable. Trump can’t back down here. He’s where Ronald Reagan was at the start of his presidency, when the air traffic controller­s called his bluff and walked off the job. The Gipper took an action that rocked the world: He fired them.

Trump recognizes what many of the globalists don’t: the enormous leverage America has on the world economic stage. He’s now demanding that as part of a new North American Free Trade Agreement, Mexico and Canada respect American intellectu­al property rights and stop imposing price controls on our drugs and vaccines. Ditto for Europe. These nations also impose price controls on our pharmaceut­ical and technology products. Meanwhile, the Council of Economic Advisers reports that most nations impose de facto tariffs on our goods and services. That has to stop. And don’t be surprised if the Germans, French, Italians and other EU members groan but ultimately agree to Trump’s terms.

If this plays out the way we all hope, Trump may score the biggest victory for freer and fairer trade practices in American history. If China doesn’t back down, things could get ugly.

 ?? AP PHOTO ?? SHAKING THINGS UP: President Trump shows off the memorandum he signed last month imposing tariffs and investment restrictio­ns on China.
AP PHOTO SHAKING THINGS UP: President Trump shows off the memorandum he signed last month imposing tariffs and investment restrictio­ns on China.

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