Los Angeles Times

Liberalize trade to reduce our inflation and supply-chain woes

- By Jeffrey Frankel eading economies

Lhave been afflicted with new problems over the past year. The United States is struggling with both supply-chain blockages and a critical shortage of baby formula. The European Union faces the threat of scarce energy supplies because of sanctions on Russian fossil-fuel exports. And almost all countries are experienci­ng high inflation.

Some have blamed these problems on excessive dependence on internatio­nal trade — that is, globalizat­ion. Deglobaliz­ation, fragmentat­ion, reshoring, friendshor­ing, decoupling and resilience have become buzzwords. There is a widespread sentiment that individual countries would have been less exposed to recent shocks had they been more self-sufficient.

The argument goes beyond observing that supply chains generate diminishin­g returns for private firms. Government policies that economists label as protection­ist have gained political support — beginning, notably, with former President Trump’s trade war in 2018. The impression is that trade barriers could help protect us all.

But the problems we’re facing are, in fact, examples of how trade barriers erected by government­s have reduced resilience. In each case, liberaliza­tion could help mitigate the problem.

Start with the bottleneck­s in U.S. shipping. The remedy here is to repeal the Jones Act, which requires that all shipping between U.S. ports use American carriers and employ crews that are at least 75% American. This legislatio­n was originally enacted in 1920, with the aim of enhancing self-sufficienc­y and national security. But the U.S. maritime industry’s inability to cope with sudden surges in demand, like for merchandis­e imports over the past year, has contribute­d to supply-chain delays. Without the Jones Act, American firms could hire foreignown­ed vessels to handle such a surge, and logistics would be more resilient.

As for overland transport disruption­s in the U.S., a shortage of truck chassis has been part of the problem. The solution is to roll back the tariff that impedes imports of chassis from abroad, which could help fill the gap.

The baby formula shortage calls for a similar approach. Abbott Nutrition, one of only four major U.S. producers of baby formula, recalled some of its products in February following the discovery of traces of bacteria in one factory. Recalls are common. But the resulting acute shortage illustrate­s how internatio­nal trade could have made up most of the shortfall.

After all, there was no lack of infant formula on internatio­nal markets. But the U.S. has steep protection­ist barriers against dairy imports. These include tariffs as well as unnecessar­ily restrictiv­e administra­tive hurdles and “Buy American” rules that constrain the federal government’s Special Supplement­al Program for Women, Infants, and Children, which distribute­s half of the infant formula consumed in the U.S. Trump even raised barriers on imports of infant formula from Canada when he renegotiat­ed the North American Free Trade Agreement. The U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion recently agreed to cut some red tape to let in imports temporaril­y. But there should not be barriers in the first place.

One can draw a general conclusion from the baby-formula episode. It is true that exposure to internatio­nal trade can sometimes be a source of volatility when shocks arise abroad.

For example, Germany’s willful increase in dependence on Russian natural gas over the last 10 years made it highly vulnerable when Russia invaded Ukraine in February. But free trade can also mitigate volatility when the shock originates domestical­ly.

Meanwhile, the EU and the U.S. want to substitute renewable energy sources for fossil fuels, especially those purchased from Russia. One policy that could help reduce the cost of solar and wind power is to lift barriers to imports of solar panels and wind turbines.

On June 6, President Biden’s administra­tion announced a twoyear pause on pending new tariffs on imports of solar panels. That’s good for both the environmen­t and America’s ability to cope with higher global energy prices. But the U.S. still has the old tariffs.

So does the EU, where cutting demand for Russian fossil fuels will be much more difficult. Rolling back tariffs and other barriers to importing renewable energy equipment would be a step in the right direction.

Finally, one remedy for the current inflation problem is to lower import barriers generally. Tariffs on U.S. imports of softwood lumber from Canada have exacerbate­d the rising cost of housing constructi­on. Trump’s tariffs on steel and aluminum have increased the prices paid by U.S. firms, which in turn have contribute­d to higher prices paid by consumers for nails, automobile­s and many other products containing the two metals.

In a recent study, the Peterson Institute for Internatio­nal Economics estimated that a feasible package of trade liberaliza­tion could deliver a one-time reduction in U.S. consumer price index inflation of around 1.3 percentage points, amounting to $797 per household.

The Biden administra­tion is reportedly considerin­g rolling back some of Trump’s tariffs on imports from China in particular, as one of the few concrete steps it can take that would immediatel­y help alleviate inflation. The effect on inflation will be less than 1.3 percentage points, because the full “feasible package” will not be adopted. But it would be an encouragin­g step.

To be sure, trade liberaliza­tion will not be nearly enough to eliminate inflation. But the broader lesson is the same as for baby formula, transport bottleneck­s and energy security: Openness to trade can be a source of resilience.

 ?? Eric Gay Associated Press ?? U.S. TARIFFS were a contributo­r to the baby formula shortage.
Eric Gay Associated Press U.S. TARIFFS were a contributo­r to the baby formula shortage.

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