The Day

Economists warn Trump about tariffs

Letter invokes start of the Great Depression

- By JOSH WINGROVE

To some of the biggest voices in U.S. economics, it could be 1930 all over again.

More than 1,100 economists, including Nobel laureates and former presidenti­al advisers, have signed a letter warning Donald Trump about his tariff-heavy approach to trade. Many of its passages quote directly from another letter sent in 1930, cautioning against protection­ist measures the U.S. imposed at the start of what became the Great Depression.

“Congress did not take economists’ advice in 1930, and Americans across the country paid the price,” the economists say in the letter released Thursday. “Much has changed since 1930 — for example, trade is now significan­tly more important to our economy — but the fundamenta­l economic principles as explained at the time have not.”

The letter, organized by the Washington-based National Taxpayers Union, comes as the Trump administra­tion travels to China this week for talks aimed at averting a trade war and weighs whether to permanentl­y exempt allies from steel and aluminum tariffs. Those disputes are clouding the outlook for the U.S. economy, which is now in its second-longest expansion on record.

“Economists are pretty united in their opposition to protection­ist trade policy,” Bryan Riley, director of the NTU’s free-trade initiative, said in an interview. “It’s the economic equivalent of flat-earth trade policy.”

Trump is considerin­g levies on as

much as $150 billion worth of Chinese imports on the grounds of alleged intellectu­al property theft, while Beijing has vowed to respond with tariffs of its own on everything from U.S. soybeans to planes.

The original letter, sent 88 years ago to urge U.S. lawmakers to reject the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act, didn’t work. The law passed in 1930 and was a key factor in a trade war that deepened the worldwide economic slump. The authors of the current letter — including last year’s Nobel winner Richard Thaler and Gregory Mankiw, a former chief economic adviser to President George W. Bush — fear a repeat.

“We are convinced that increased protective duties would be a mistake. They would operate, in general, to increase the prices which domestic consumers would have to pay” and hurt “the great majority of our citizens,” they write. “Few people could hope to gain from such a change.”

Workers in constructi­on, transporta­tion, retail, banks, hotels, utilities and other profession­als would “clearly lose” in a tariff war, the economists say, adding farmers would be doubly hurt — paying higher prices for imported goods and seeing export options curtailed.

“Countries cannot permanentl­y buy from us unless they are permitted to sell to us,” the economists say. “We would urge our government to consider the bitterness which a policy of higher tariffs would inevitably inject into our internatio­nal relations. A tariff war does not furnish good soil for the growth of world peace.”

 ?? LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ?? Rep. Willis Hawley, R-Ore., left, and Sen. Reed Smoot, R-Utah, on April 11, 1929.
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS Rep. Willis Hawley, R-Ore., left, and Sen. Reed Smoot, R-Utah, on April 11, 1929.

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