Las Vegas Review-Journal

Here’s why Trump is wrong about tariffs

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getting value from using inputs made abroad, and non-americans are investing in the United States.

Neil Erwin, senior economics correspond­ent of The New York Times, describes the United States’ trade balance this way:

“It’s true that the United States has a $58 billion trade deficit with Mexico, for example. But it’s not as if Americans were just flinging money across the Rio Grande out of charity. Americans get a lot of good stuff for that: avocados, for example, and Cancun vacations.”

Trading with China, or with Mexico for that matter, does not mean that Americans lose; rather, Americans receive desirable goods and services in return for those dollars.

Restrictin­g trade on the basis of a trade deficit is foolish.

The way that the trade balance is calculated is too limited in scope to represent fully Americans’ trade activities. When the United States’ $4.4 trillion of foreign investment­s are included in the calculatio­n, the trade deficit closes, portraying a more complete picture of our nation’s trade standing than the popularly cited figure.

Trump should cease calling for tariffs, and here’s why:

Chinese goods are created there for a reason — China can produce them at lower cost than U.S. manufactur­ers could. Raising the prices that American consumers and businesses pay for imported goods through taxes effectivel­y decreases our incomes and increases production costs for the goods we produce.

This hurts the poorest Americans the most, who spend more of their total income on consumable products.

Furthermor­e, if Trump’s aim is to create jobs in the United States, tariffs are actually counterpro­ductive. Again, many businesses rely on imported goods — including, of course, from China — to create their products.

In a recent Bloomberg article, an American bicycle manufactur­er explained that he needs 40 parts from Asia to assemble his bikes, and that buying the parts locally would be prohibitiv­ely costly. According to the U.S. Department of Commerce, at least half of imports are used as inputs by U.S. businesses.

In his trade meeting with Chinese officials, Trump addressed the elephants in the room: “I know there are some globalists in the room right now.”

Advocates of tariffs portray the debate as a battle between globalists and nationalis­ts: those who put America first, and those who would rather outsource jobs and services to other countries.

But tariffs don’t put American interests first, they simply render American consumers less well-off and American businesses less competitiv­e.

If Trump really wants keep America competitiv­e, he should embrace free trade.

Donald Boudreaux is a professor of economics and Getchell Chair at the Mercatus Center, George Mason University. Danielle Barden is a Mercatus fellow. They wrote this for Insidesour­ces.com.

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