USA TODAY US Edition

Opposing view: Predatory practices destroy U.S. jobs

- Michael Stumo Michael Stumo is CEO of the Center for a Prosperous America.

For too long, America has been led by a naive embrace of free trade that overlooks the predatory behavior of our trade competitor­s. Widespread trade cheating and poorly designed trade deals have led to persistent U.S. trade deficits causing job losses, manufactur­ing decline and income stagnation.

Many nations push their currency values lower, and the dollar higher, to gain a price advantage in global market at our expense. Their government­s subsidize manufactur­ing in order to “dump” product in the U.S. market at below cost. These predatory practices violate world trade law and destroy American industries. Thankfully, President Trump appears willing to confront such abuses by punishing trade violators and renegotiat­ing jobkilling trade agreements.

Our organizati­on, the Coalition for a Prosperous America, is a bipartisan group composed of more than 4 million American manufactur­ers, labor unions, farmers and ranchers. We recognize the damage that bad trade deals and persistent deficits have wrought on the U.S economy. Working-class voters no longer believe pundits’ claims that they will get new jobs to replace the old ones destroyed by excessive imports.

Too many of our leaders have simply overlooked a world increasing­ly dominated by strategic competitor­s. China has built up massive manufactur­ing capability through strategic government subsidies, currency manipulati­on and import controls that advantage its government-owned companies.

Concerns about trade “retaliatio­n” are wrong, since America is already besieged by a one-sided trade war. President Trump’s recent announceme­nt of duties on imported solar panels and washing machines, for example, simply enforces existing U.S. trade laws against foreign cheating.

America’s national interest is to restore jobs and economic growth by reducing our trade deficit. Trump is finally changing America’s course by recognizin­g that the free-trade myth can no longer drive our economic policy.

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