Gulf Today

Cracks in Biden’s ‘Build Back Better’ programme

- Noah Smith,

With the US presidenti­al campaign heading into the home stretch, President Donald Trump will surely try to tout his record on economic issues. But the numbers don’t speak well of his policies. Unfortunat­ely, the approach of his rival, Joe Biden, threatens to make some of the same mistakes.

Trump was elected in 2016 on a promise to restore American competitiv­eness, revitalize the flagging manufactur­ing sector, and reduce gaping trade deficits. But even before the pandemic, his trade war looked decidedly less than successful.

Despite a massive slate of tariffs that mostly began in the second half of 2018, the Us-china bilateral trade deficit barely budged, if at all:

The same patern holds for the overall US trade deficit, which hasn’t changed much since the end of the last recession. US imports flatlined in 2018 and 2019, but so did exports.

Nor did the US factory sector enjoy a renaissanc­e. Manufactur­ing production had been growing along with the overall economy before Trump unleashed his trade war, but it stagnated aterward.

Tariffs simply failed to do the job Trump and advisors such as economist Peter Navarro and trade representa­tive Robert Lighthizer wanted them to do. They may have hurt China’s economy somewhat, but at the cost of also hurting US consumers in the process. And they didn’t accomplish any of their primary stated purposes — cuting the trade deficit, increasing US competitiv­eness relative to China, or restoring US manufactur­ing.

Why not? Basic intuition says tariffs make imports more expensive, pushing domestic consumers to shit toward domestical­ly produced goods. Exports don’t get taxed under the tariff, so they shouldn’t be affected. According to this logic, tariffs should make the trade deficit go down, and domestic producers should get a boost from all the consumer demand that gets pushed their way.

Theoretica­lly, exchange rates might adjust to cancel out most of the effect of tariffs, but this doesn’t seem to have happened in the US case — both the dollar’s overall strength and its strength against the Chinese renminbi changed very litle ater Trump’s trade war began.

So it’s technicall­y possible that Trump’s tariffs worked as designed, but their effect was simply swamped by other, much larger forces buffeting the economy. Ater many years of tariffs, maybe we would have seen a slight positive effect on the trade balance and manufactur­ing.

But the likelier possibilit­y is that tariffs hurt exactly the US companies they were designed to help. The reason is that trade isn’t the simple two-way exchange Lighthizer and others seem to imagine, with each country making products domestical­ly and then trying to sell them; instead, it involves many countries and a vast web of supply chains.

Economists Kyle Handley, Fariha Kamal, and Ryan Monarch recently tried to estimate just how much this effect has hurt US exporters. Using detailed data from companies themselves, the economists analyzed which US exports tended to drop more (or grow less slowly) ater the tariffs went into effect. They found the products whose supply chains were taxed more heavily ended up suffering significan­tly worse.

Trump is unlikely to realise or admit that his favourite economic weapon is hurting the very companies it was intended to help. So it will fall to Biden, if he manages to win, to heed the lessons of economics and put trade policy on a sounder footing.

Unfortunat­ely, Biden’s “Build Back Beter” programme includes provisions to force government contractor­s to buy American-made products. This has much the same effect as tariffs — protecting US products from foreign competitio­n, but making their inputs more expensive at the same time. It’s likely to raise costs and decrease competitiv­eness.

A much beter approach is to focus on promoting exports rather than protecting the domestic market. Helping US companies compete in foreign markets will address the trade deficit without damaging their supply chains. It will also potentiall­y increase their productivi­ty, by nudging them to succeed in more competitiv­e internatio­nal markets rather than sheltering them in an uncompetit­ive, cosseted domestic market. There are many policies a Biden administra­tion could use to promote US exports; none involve tariffs.

Tariffs, and other protection­ist policies, aren’t suited to a world of complex supply chains. The idea that US companies are best served by walling them off from the world needs to be relegated to the dustbin of history.

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