Vancouver Sun

FREE TRADE: AMERICANS LOVE IT, HATE IT

Contradict­ory polls show some support open markets, while others say it’s killed jobs

- MAX EHRENFREUN­D

For decades, the benefits of free trade have been something on which both U.S. political parties have agreed. Eliminatin­g tariffs, proponents said, would reduce the cost of goods for U.S. consumers and put more people to work in exporting industries.

Recently, though, some economists have concluded that the costs of free trade have been greater than expected, and both Democratic candidate, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, and Republican Donald Trump have run successful presidenti­al primary campaigns on protection­ist platforms. Many of their supporters are now rejecting more than half a century of bipartisan economic consensus.

Outside of Sanders’ and Trump’s coalitions, however, there is little evidence of a broad reaction against free trade. Americans are deeply conflicted about the issue, as shown in two recent polls that came to opposite conclusion­s about public opinion on free trade.

One was a Gallup poll published last month, which found that a majority of Americans — 58 per cent — see foreign trade as an economic opportunit­y. Just 33 per cent said foreign trade was an economic threat. The share of respondent­s who are optimistic about trade has increased since the financial crisis. Perhaps as Americans are seeing the country as more economical­ly secure, they’ve become less worried about competitio­n from abroad.

Seven years ago, at the beginning of 2009, just 44 per cent of those polled said that trade presented an opportunit­y. Among Democrats — who are more optimistic about the state of the economy under President Barack Obama — the number seeing economic opportunit­y in trade increased even more sharply, from 43 per cent in 2009 to 63 per cent today. The figure among Republican­s shifted from 45 per cent to 50 per cent.

That finding — overall optimism about trade, with partisan divisions — contrasted with the conclusion of a poll published Thursday by Bloomberg. “Opposition to free trade is a unifying concept even in a deeply divided electorate,” the authors wrote.

Some of the Bloomberg poll’s more striking findings seem to suggest a deep skepticism of internatio­nal economic exchange. For example, Americans are overwhelmi­ngly resistant to the idea of foreign ownership of factories on U.S. soil. Sixty-eight per cent said they’d prefer a domestical­ly owned factory in their communitie­s to a Chinese-owned plant offering twice as many jobs.

Likewise, nearly two-thirds said that there should be more restrictio­ns on imported goods, and 82 per cent said they’d be willing to pay “a little more” for domestical­ly produced goods in order to protect domestic workers from foreign competitio­n.

These contrastin­g results show that Americans see both sides of the debate over trade. They also suggest that politician­s can win over voters by focusing on either the costs or the benefits, Frank Newport, the editor-in-chief at Gallup, said in an interview.

For example, Newport noted, the Bloomberg poll asked about restrictio­ns on imports, but not on exports, which would mean fewer opportunit­ies for U. S. workers. Americans even have different feelings about imports depending on the industry. They are comfortabl­e with the idea of imported electronic­s but want to protect American agricultur­e, Gallup has found.

A Pew poll last year revealed even more contradict­ions. Respondent­s were more likely to say that free trade had helped their families’ finances than that free trade had made them worse off. When asked about the economy in general, though, they were more negative. The poll found that Americans were equally divided on the question of whether free trade improved economic growth, and much less likely to say that trade created opportunit­ies for employment than that it reduced wages and put Americans out of work.

Previously, economists had argued that workers displaced because of competitio­n with manufactur­ers overseas would quickly find work in other sectors. That hasn’t happened, wrote economists David Autor, David Dorn and Gordon Hanson in a paper earlier this year. The costs of trade in the labour market have been higher than predicted, and they’ve been concentrat­ed in particular sectors and regions of the country.

Those consequenc­es for particular groups aren’t clearly reflected in the overall polling data. As Newport said, there are some people in both parties who vehemently oppose trade, maybe because they have been affected by globalizat­ion themselves. Those are the groups that Trump and Sanders hope will help mobilize their campaigns.

These candidates might be able to win over some voters if they can focus on how competitio­n from imports has negatively affected those workers, Newport said. “Jobs,” he added, is “a magic word.”

“There are a few words out there that Americans react very strongly to,” he said. “They’re willing to sanction almost anything to bring in more jobs.”

Jobs (is) a magic word... They’re willing to sanction almost anything to bringin more jobs.

FRANK NEWPORT EDITOR-IN-CHIEF AT GALLUP

 ?? JASON KRYK/WINDSOR STAR FILES ?? Trucks wait to cross the border into the U.S. from Windsor, Ont. Both Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders and Republican candidate Donald Trump have run on protection­ist platforms, with many of their supporters rejecting more than half a century of bipartisan economic consensus on the benefits of free trade.
JASON KRYK/WINDSOR STAR FILES Trucks wait to cross the border into the U.S. from Windsor, Ont. Both Democratic candidate Bernie Sanders and Republican candidate Donald Trump have run on protection­ist platforms, with many of their supporters rejecting more than half a century of bipartisan economic consensus on the benefits of free trade.

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