The Arizona Republic

Protection­ism an ailment caused by government

- George Will Columnist George Will’s email address is george will@washpost.com.

WASHINGTON – The cascading effects of U.S. protection­ism on U.S. producers and consumers constitute an ongoing tutorial about what Daniel Patrick Moynihan called “iatrogenic government.” In medicine, an iatrogenic ailment is one inadverten­tly caused by a physician or medicine. Iatrogenic government – except the damage it currently is doing is not inadverten­t – was on display last week.

The Trump administra­tion unveiled a plan to disburse $16 billion to farmers as balm for wounds – predictabl­e and predicted – from the retaliatio­n of other nations, especially China, against U.S. exports in response to the administra­tion’s tariffs. The $16 billion does not need to be approved by Congress because not much that presidents do nowadays needs to be. The president said the sum will be paid for by the billions of dollars the Treasury takes in from China. The evident sincerity of his frequently reiterated belief that exporters to the United States pay the tariffs that U.S. importers and consumers pay is more alarming than mere meretricio­usness would be.

The $16 billion is not the first such tranche ($12 billion was disbursed last year) and the $28 billion probably will not be the government’s final restitutio­n, using other people’s money, for damages it is doing. So, taxpayers who are paying more for imported goods covered by the administra­tion’s tariffs (which are taxes Americans pay) are also paying to compensate some other Americans for injuries inflicted on them in response to the tariffs that are injuring the taxpayers.

President Donald Trump, who deserves Winston Churchill’s descriptio­n of U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles (a “bull ... who carries his china closet with him”), has tweeted that the government could buy $15 billion worth of surplus commoditie­s (for you keeping score at home, that would bring tariff compensati­on for farmers to $43 billion) from U.S. farmers (“@POTUS loves his farmers”) and ship the commoditie­s to developing nations. What could possibly go wrong?

In a masterpiec­e of understate­ment, Darci Vetter, President Barack Obama’s chief agricultur­al trade negotiator, told Politico that this could have “serious market implicatio­ns” in recipient countries. Implicatio­ns such as the devastatio­n of local agricultur­e, the largest industry in many developing nations.

The administra­tion might be pleased that some non-Chinese companies that manufactur­e in China are moving production elsewhere to avoid U.S. tariffs on goods from China, thereby slowing that nation’s economy. What could possibly go wrong? Presumably the administra­tion has thought through the consequenc­es of promoting an economic slowdown in the country that buys many U.S. goods – e.g., China is one of Boeing’s biggest customers, and Cadillac sells more cars in China than in America.

Zachary Karabell, an investor writing in The Wall Street Journal, has noted that China is not as vulnerable to U.S. pressure as Japan was in the 1980s, when the U.S. purchased about a third of Japanese exports and supplied about half of its foreign investment and much of its national defense. “China has a $700 billion trade relationsh­ip with the U.S., including imports and exports, but it has a $3 trillion trade relationsh­ip with the rest of the world.”

The New York Times recently reported that Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, a member of an administra­tion that purports to be a dike against a rising tide of socialism, is “encouragin­g [U.S.] firms to reorient their supply chains and source their products elsewhere” – meaning, out of China. Capitalist­s believe that market signals, not political appointees with political agendas, give satisfacto­ry encouragem­ent for reasonable commercial behaviors.

Today’s system is capitalism leavened by cronyism and administer­ed by know-it-alls. What could go wrong? A report by a Federal Reserve researcher and two University of Chicago economists has found that tariffs on washing machines raised their cost by $86 on average – but also raised the prices of dryers by $92 as, The New York Times reports, “manufactur­ers of laundry equipment used the tariffs as an opportunit­y to raise prices on things that were not, in fact, affected by the tariffs.” The tariffs, according to the report, have created about 1,800 American manufactur­ing jobs, but at a cost of over $817,000 a job.

This is the art of the deal as practiced by him who relishes his self-bestowed sobriquet “Tariff Man,” and who explains tariffs this way: “When people or countries come in to raid the great wealth of our Nation, I want them to pay for the privilege of doing so.” Is that clear? Perhaps not, but this is: Protection­ism is yet another example of government being the disease for which it pretends to be the cure.

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