The Oklahoman

Punishing the Canadian bullies

- George Will

DWASHINGTO­N onald Trump's almost erotic relationsh­ip with the Whirlpool Corp. continued last week when he traveled to Whirlpool's factory in Clyde, Ohio, where he boasted to workers that he re-imposed tariffs on Canadian aluminum. Why this pleased them is mysterious.

“Canada was taking advantage of us, as usual,” he said. He is indignant that although America has been made great again, it is being bullied by Canada, which inflicts on American purchasers aluminum that is too inexpensiv­e, destroying “our aluminum jobs.”

But only 3% of U.S. aluminum jobs involve producing primary aluminum. Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics explains that smelters use vast quantities of energy, so most are located where electricit­y is inexpensiv­e, as in Canada, which has abundant hydropower. Only three companies smelt primary aluminum in the United States, and one of them, Alcoa, smelts globally, so these tariffs essentiall­y serve two companies. Ninety-seven percent of U.S. aluminum jobs involve making things from the metal — things that will cost more and hence sell less because of tariffs.

The Trump-Whirlpool romance began in 2017 when Whirlpool sought, and got, protection from imported washing machines that Americans desired because of price and quality. In 2006, when the government had worried about Whirlpool's purchase of its largest competitor, Maytag, Whirlpool had said: Worry not, competitio­n from imports (especially from South Korea's Samsung and LG) will keep our prices low and quality high. Eleven years later, although Whirlpool still had a larger market share than Samsung and LG combined, Whirlpool got Trump's administra­tion to impose tariffs on those companies' machines.

But in March 2018, the administra­tion, citing the “national security” threat posed by steel and aluminum imports, imposed tariffs on those metals. Some nations, including Canada, retaliated with tariffs, some of them on agricultur­al products, which caused the administra­tion to pay billions to farmers as balm for injuries it had provoked.

When not farming in Iowa's Butler County, Republican Chuck Grassley chairs the Senate Finance Committee. He said there would be no ratificati­on of the USMCA (the US/Mexico/Canada Agreement, NAFTA's successor) unless the retaliatio­n against agricultur­e stopped. It stopped and USMCA passed, but the United States retained the right to reimpose tariffs on aluminum imports if they surged “meaningful­ly beyond historic volumes.” But imports are not, as the administra­tion claims, “substantia­lly” above historical levels. This year's January-through-June imports from Canada of primary aluminum were nearly 5% lower than those of 2017's first six months. But Trump imposed tariffs and Canada unsurprisi­ngly retaliated with tariffs on U.S. goods.

Lynn Westmorela­nd, a Republican and former six-term member of Congress, says U.S. aluminum smelters produce slightly less than 1 million tons a year. In 2017, U.S. consumptio­n was more than 5 million tons. Westmorela­nd says: We must buy the difference somewhere. If not from our neighbor, ally and USMCA partner Canada, “Would U.S. trade officials prefer aluminum from Russia or China?”

Congress vests presidents with vast discretion for government's management of trade, so corporatio­ns seek protection, and administra­tions often grant it, regardless of steep and demonstrab­le social costs. Those who govern us are governed by this principle: Concentrat­ed benefits are visible and appreciate­d; dispersed costs are invisible and hence not resented.

Of all the congressio­nal Republican­s' many apostacies from professed principles, none is as momentous — because none has such comprehens­ive implicatio­ns

— as abandonmen­t of free trade. This encourages promiscuou­s government nullificat­ions of market allocation­s of wealth and opportunit­y, and the displaceme­nt of consumer and producer preference­s by government — meaning political — dictates, an odd achievemen­t for a party rhetorical­ly horrified by socialism.

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