Chattanooga Times Free Press

SOME THINGS ARE TRUE EVEN IF TRUMP BELIEVES THEM

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One of the hardest things to accept for all of us who want Donald Trump to be a one-term president is the fact that some things are true even if Donald Trump believes them! And one of those things is that we have a real trade problem with China. Imports of Chinese goods alone equal two-thirds of the global U.S. trade deficit today.

But while Trump’s gut instinct is right, he’s so ignorant about the facts, he’s so easily swayed by the last person he talked to or by ill-considered promises to his base, he’s so weirdly obsessed with protecting “manly” industries like coal, steel and aluminum that affect our allies more than China that he can’t be relied on to navigate the China trade issue in our national interest.

For those of us who believe in free trade — and that China and America can both thrive at the same time — but who are convinced that China hasn’t been playing fair and don’t trust Trump to fix it, this is a critical problem to think through.

So, I sat down with David Autor, the MIT economist who’s done some of the most compelling research on the impacts of China trade. The first problem he raised has to do with the “shock” that China delivered to U.S. lower-tech manufactur­ers in the years right after Beijing joined the World Trade Organizati­on in 2001, when it gained more open access to the U.S. and other world markets.

Autor and his colleagues David Dorn and Gordon Hanson found in a 2016 study that roughly 40 percent of the decline in U.S. manufactur­ing between 2000 and 2007 was due to a surge in imports from China primarily after it joined the WTO. And it led to the sudden loss of about 1 million factory jobs in Ohio, Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvan­ia. Trump won all of those states.

This “China shock,” said Autor, led not only to mass unemployme­nt but also to social disintegra­tion, less marriage, more opioid abuse and more people dropping out of the labor market and requiring government aid. “China’s rapid rise, while enormously positive for world welfare, has created identifiab­le losers in trade-impacted industries and the labor markets in which they are located.”

The second problem has to do with access to China’s market for the goods U.S. companies sell. There, noted Autor, “China has not only taken our lunch, they’ve opened a restaurant that’s serving it to their citizens.”

We assumed that China would “reform and open” after it joined the WTO, said James McGregor, a longtime China trade expert. Instead, China “reformed and closed.” So China kept a 25 percent tariff on new cars imported from the U.S. (our tariff is 2.5 percent) and similarly steep tariffs on imported auto parts.

China grew its companies behind a wall of protection, fed them with state funds and, when they were competitiv­e enough, unleashed them on the world, or only then opened up to U.S. competitor­s, but by then its own companies — as in the case of credit cards — had a vice grip on the market.

And now, as my colleague in China — Keith Bradsher, also an expert on China trade, reports: “Chinese and foreign makers are about to start sending huge numbers of fully built cars to the U.S. We are about to see a big increase in the U.S. trade deficit in automotive in the next several years.”

Tesla founder Elon Musk tweeted it right when he said that “no US auto company is allowed to own even 50% of their own factory in China, but there are five 100% China-owned EV auto companies in the US.”

EVs are one of the next great global industries, and China has plans to use its market access rules to control the whole EV supply chain, not to mention aerospace, quantum computing and a range of other advanced industries.

China, knowing U.S. pressure is coming, has been looking for more U.S. goods to buy, said Bradsher, “but the U.S. is just not that competitiv­e anymore in a lot of products other than oil, food and aircraft. And China is now in the test-flight stage for mass-producing its own jetliners as well.”

So what would a smart American president do? First, he’d sign the Trans-Pacific Partnershi­p trade accord. TPP eliminated as many as 18,000 tariffs on U.S. exports with the most dynamic economies in the Pacific and created a 12-nation trading bloc headed by the U.S. and focused on protecting what we do best — high-value-added manufactur­ing and intellectu­al property. Alas, Trump tore it up without reading it — one of the stupidest foreign policy acts ever. We Brexited Asia! China was not in TPP. It was a coalition built, in part, to pressure Beijing into fairer market access, by our rules. Trump just gave it up for free.

Once a smart president restored participat­ion in TPP, he’d start secret trade talks with the Chinese — no need for anyone to lose face — and tell Beijing: “Since you like your trade rules so much, we’re going to copy them for your companies operating in America: 25 percent tariffs on your cars, and your tech companies that open here have to joint venture and share intellectu­al property with a U.S. partner — and store all their data on U.S. servers.”

At the same time, we need to be much more serious about using every tool we have — tax incentives, Pell grants, community colleges — to create the conditions for every American to be constantly upgrading skills and for every company to keep training its workers. That will matter whether the challenge is China or robots.

Too much of the economic discussion of late “has been focused on the 1 percent versus the 99 percent,” observed Autor. “It’s become a kind of ‘inequality porn’ — where you get so focused on those two numbers that it becomes demobilizi­ng.”

The lack of real meritocrac­y in our country today, he added, “is not about the returns to realized skills. It is about the inequality in the ability to acquire those skills. Too many people live in areas where they cannot get them. If you get educated in America today, and have a good work ethic, you are going to be rewarded. What does education do? It gives you a skill set and enables you to adapt to change better. And cities and towns anchored by universiti­es tend to reinvent themselves more easily; they’re engines of adaptation. So higher education benefits not just college students but college places.”

In short, if you want to get rid of walls and ceilings — and I do — you have to strengthen the floors under every American.

 ??  ?? Thomas Friedman
Thomas Friedman

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