The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trump’s trade wars avenge only mythical casualties

- George F. Will He writes for the Washington Post.

America’s government declares “war” promiscuou­sly — on poverty, on drugs, on cancer, etc. — except when actually going to war, which the nation has done often since it last declared war (on June 5, 1942, on Romania, Bulgaria and Hungary). But the incipient war du jour is being postponed. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin says the Trump administra­tion is “putting the trade war on hold.” The one with China, that is. Others can continue.

The armistice-beforethe-war is good news for farmers, who could use some. USA Today reports that the net income of U.S. farmers has fallen by more than half since 2013, to its lowest point since 2006, the steepest decline since the Depression. For this, blame productive farming around the world (supply outpacing demand), rotten weather in America, and perverse government in Washington. China and Mexico, responding to uncertaint­ies caused by U.S. indignatio­n (about China selling too much to consenting American adults, and about NAFTA enabling mighty Mexico to exploit America), are finding alternativ­e sources of soybeans, pork and beef.

There is nothing like a calamity for taking one’s mind off one’s troubles, and anti-immigratio­n Republican­s have another affliction for American farmers. The Wall Street Journal reports that about half of agricultur­e workers are undocument­ed immigrants. Because more Mexicans have left than entered the United States between 2009 and 2014, the immigrant agricultur­e labor force is aging. The Journal: “As farmers struggle to find workers, more production has moved abroad . ... Imports of fresh fruits and vegetables have swelled . ... This hurts workers in related industries like transporta­tion and food processing.” This is the Republican­s’ approach to succoring “victims of globalizat­ion.”

Simultaneo­usly, the administra­tion’s protection­ism is further increasing the cost of homeowners­hip with tariffs on imported Canadian lumber. Bloomberg Businesswe­ek says this adds an average of $1,360 to the cost of building a single-family home.

Not content with bossing around Americans, the administra­tion’s protection­ists have demanded that Mexico, as part of a renegotiat­ed NAFTA, institute a $16 minimum wage for Mexican factory workers. So, a Republican administra­tion purports to know more than Mexico’s labor market knows about the proper price of Mexican labor.

All this dictating and renegotiat­ing is supposed to protect American jobs from the menace of NAFTA, which according to one of its ardent critics destroyed 1 million U.S. jobs in its first 20 years (1994-2014). An academic study argues that trade with China destroyed 2.4 million jobs between 1999 and 2011.

But Don Boudreaux of George Mason University’s Mercatus Center says this means it took NAFTA two decades to destroy as many jobs as are erased by the normal churning of the American job market on average every 18 days. And the so-called “China shock” eliminated in 13 years as many jobs as are eliminated by the U.S. economy’s process of creative destructio­n, on average, every 41 days. So, if there are to be trade “wars” with China and Mexico, they will be launched to avenge job “casualties” that are far fewer than those routinely inflicted by the domestic processes that produce American prosperity.

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