USA TODAY International Edition

Our view: Tariffs boomerang on America's farmers

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In the 1970s, a joke made the rounds on college campuses that went something like this. Question: How many surrealist­s does it take to screw in a light bulb? Answer: fish.

Admittedly a bit esoteric, the joke found favor with those who saw hilarity in an absurdist answer that bore no relation to the question.

It came to mind this week with President Donald Trump's latest trade tantrum, a plan to impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from Argentina and Brazil. This action, Trump explained by tweet, would punish the two countries for driving down their currency valuations, which makes their exports more attractive. Among others being hurt by devalued currencies, the president said, are American farmers.

Let's get this straight: Trump's plan to help American farmers is to punish South American metals companies. Or, put another way: fish.

Let's start with a few facts. The currencies of Brazil and Argentina are weak not because of manipulati­on but because their commodity- driven economies are in tatters. Outsiders aren't buying much of their nonfarm products and don't want to invest there.

A metals tariff, moreover, is more likely to hurt U. S. farmers than help.

Farmers are already reeling from Trump's other trade wars as countries such as China retaliate against tariffs by buying agricultur­al products from places other than the United States.

Brazil and Argentina, both big soybean producers, have been among the beneficiaries.

The president's new tariffs would put more pressure on those countries' economies and potentiall­y push down their currencies further, which, in turn, would make their agricultur­e exports more attractive.

Perhaps Trump will see the absurdity of this trade policy and plot a quiet retreat. Or perhaps not. With him, you never know.

The larger point is this: If the president has a grand strategy or endgame on trade, it's not visible to the naked eye. He uses tariffs to make noise, create chaos, get attention and feel a sense of power. Congress ought to pass pending measures to restrict a president's ability to impose tariffs unilateral­ly.

At home, U. S. steelmaker­s love tariffs. But domestic manufactur­ers that buy steel, a much larger part of the economy, are getting hammered — both from higher input costs and from the sheer uncertaint­y that Trump's policies foment.

U. S. farmers are getting hit even harder thanks to declining exports. In an attempt to buy them off, the administra­tion this year announced $ 12 billion in subsidies. That's not much consolatio­n. Farmers would rather have robust sales than Washington handouts. And, so far, red tape and long waits have meant little aid is getting to them.

All of this points to a Trump trade policy best seen as an absurdist joke, an unfunny one at that.

 ?? NICHOLAS KAMM/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES ?? President Donald Trump shows a new hat as he heads for Indiana in 2018.
NICHOLAS KAMM/ AFP/ GETTY IMAGES President Donald Trump shows a new hat as he heads for Indiana in 2018.

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