The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Import tax a bad deal for Americans

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Economic protection­ism has been a big part of President Donald Trump’s success, but rather than “winning,” it would be a losing propositio­n for most Americans.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., and Rep. Kevin Brady, R-Texas, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, have proposed a continuati­on of this theme in the form of a “border adjustment tax,” otherwise known as a tariff, of 20 percent on imported goods. It is being pushed as part of a larger tax reform package, which would likely include a significan­t reduction to the corporate tax rate as well. It seems that Ryan has recently been reconsider­ing the measure, however, after many fellow Republican members of Congress have bristled over the imposition of a tax estimated to cost $1 trillion over 10 years.

Ryan would be wise to withdraw the tax — for both political and economic reasons.

Target CEO Brian Cornell made the consequenc­es of such a tax clear at a House Ways and Means Committee hearing last month. “Under the new border adjustment tax, American families — your constituen­ts — would pay more so many multinatio­nal corporatio­ns can pay even less,” Cornell testified. “Eighty-five percent of Americans shop at Target every year. We believe this new tax would hit those families hard, raising prices on everyday essentials by up to 20 percent.”

It is true that protection­ist measures can preserve some domestic jobs, but at what cost? American Enterprise Institute economist Mark Perry sought to answer that question earlier this year. Drawing upon and updating data from a 1986 Institute for Internatio­nal Economics study that examined 31 cases studies of U.S. trade protection — most of which concerned products from the manufactur­ing sector — Perry found that the consumer losses experience­d were, on average, more than $516,000 for every domestic job “saved” by protection­ism. Moreover, Perry noted, the vast majority of jobs lost in U.S. manufactur­ing have come from automation and increased worker productivi­ty, not trade or outsourcin­g.

But an American factory where some jobs were saved, or at least prolonged, by protection­ist measures makes for a better photo op, and there is no equivalent highly organized lobby to represent the interests of U.S. consumers.

Then there are the additional negative consequenc­es that result if and when other nations retaliate in kind. When asked about the Trump administra­tion’s considerat­ion of a cut to steel imports for dubious “national security” reasons, European Trade Commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom warned that doing so would open a “Pandora’s box.”

“Many other countries would maybe also refer to security and, because of that, do a lot of protection­ist measures,” she told Bloomberg News on Monday. “We will retaliate, of course,” she added.

The us-versus-them rhetoric is certainly nothing new in politics, but the economics are pretty clear: Free trade leads to greater consumer choice, lower prices and a higher standard of living, while protection­ism stifles growth. To truly “Make America great again,” and more prosperous, Trump and other Republican­s tempted by the gilded populism of economic protection­ism should realize that free markets and free trade are the best way to improve the fortunes of the vast majority of people, both within and outside American borders.

— Los Angeles Daily News,

Digital First Media

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