Dayton Daily News

Trump was China’s chump

- Paul Krugman Paul Krugman writes for The New York Times.

Do you remember Donald Trump’s trade war? You can be forgiven for having forgotten all about it, given everything that has happened since; it sounds trivial compared with his effort to stay in power by overturnin­g a fair election. Even in terms of policy while in office, it was far less important than his pandemic denial, and probably less important than his tax cuts or his sabotage of health care.

But the trade war was uniquely Trumpian. His other policy actions were standard-issue Republican­ism, but the rest of his party didn’t share his obsession with trade deficits; indeed, he probably wouldn’t have been able to do much on that front except for the fact that U.S. law gives presidents enormous discretion when setting tariffs. Only Trump really considered trade deficits an important issue; and he, er, trumpeted what he called a “historic trade deal” under which China agreed to buy an additional $200 billion in U.S. goods and services by the end of 2021.

Now, Chad Bown of the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics, who has been the go-to source on the trade war from the beginning, has a final assessment of that deal. And it turns out to have been a complete flop: “China bought none of the additional $200 billion of exports Trump’s deal had promised.”

So Trump was a chump; the Chinese took him to the cleaners. But Trump’s haplessnes­s in dealing with foreign leaders is actually a minor part of the story. Far more important is the fact that the shocks we’ve been experienci­ng since the pandemic began make the Trumpian view of trade look even more economical­ly foolish than it did when he took office.

In the world according to Trump and Peter Navarro, the man he chose as his trade czar, internatio­nal trade is a zero-sum game. If other countries buy stuff from America, we win; if we buy stuff made abroad, we lose. Navarro and Wilbur Ross, Trump’s commerce secretary (he really knew how to pick them), made this explicit in a paper during the 2016 campaign, which asserted that the trade deficit subtracts onefor-one from U.S. growth: Every dollar we spend on imports reduces our GDP by a dollar.

Economists scoffed at this crude mercantili­sm, which completely ignored the point that imports can make us richer, because

the whole reason we buy some goods from abroad is that they are cheaper and/or better than domestical­ly produced alternativ­es. This is especially true in the modern world economy, where many products that enter internatio­nal trade are “intermedia­te goods,” like parts that are used in production. As it turned out, Trump’s tariffs disproport­ionately affected intermedia­te goods. So the tariffs raised U.S. production costs and reduced the number of manufactur­ing jobs.

Still, mercantili­sm isn’t always unadultera­ted nonsense. Under certain conditions trade deficits can reduce output and jobs, and actions to reduce those deficits can act as a form of economic stimulus. And it’s possible one of these years we will once again find ourselves facing persistent problems of inadequate demand. But that’s not where we are.

Imports have surged because many of the goods that consumers want are produced abroad, and America doesn’t have the capacity to produce them here — at least not on short notice. Furthermor­e, even when we can satisfy demand with domestic production, that production, the tariff debacle tells us, often requires imported intermedia­te goods.

Trump’s trade policies were foolish and costly — they failed by any measure you choose — but it may be a long time before any president is in a position to undo the damage.

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