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Trade wars, US tariffs on solar cells and modules, US tariffs on steel and aluminum, US trade deficit, US Treasury securities
American Shoppers at Walmart Store – Christmas 2017
Photo Credit: Digg/Associated Press
America’s trade deficit has been making the news. Our president loves to quote the amount of $800 billion: the U.S. trade deficit for trade in goods only. Our trade in services count too. They earned a surplus of over $242 billion in 2017 (Census Bureau, Exhibit 1).
The total U.S. trade deficit of goods and services in 2017 was $568 billion. We imported $2.900 trillion in goods and services while we only exported $2.332 trillion.
An examination of imports and exports of goods by principal end-use category (Census Bureau, Exhibit 10) reveal that consumer goods together with automotive vehicles, parts and engines account for our mounting deficit. Let’s not forget that goods produced by American companies in a foreign country – like the coveted Apple Smartphone designed in California – becomes an imported product on arrival in the USA.
Our president believes that import tariffs or taxes will reduce this imbalance in our foreign trade. In January 2018, the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative announced import tariffs on solar cells and modules (30%) and large residential washing machines (20%) to be phased out over a three-to-four-year period. Then, on March 8th, the Presidential Proclamation imposing import tariffs on steel (25%) and aluminum (10%) rattled our trading partners. American business leaders fear a trade war.
Steel rims for export at factory in Jiangsu Province – China – November 2017
Photo Credit: China Daily/Reuters
“Trade wars are good and easy to win,” tweeted our president on March 2, 2018.
Unlike our Dealer-in-Chief, most of us don’t thrive on chaos. A trade war would have many unintended consequences. Canada, China, India, the European Union, and United Kingdom have already issued warnings of appropriate responses. Tariffs on imported steel and aluminum will increase production costs in such industries as automobiles and construction equipment. Small producers that package their goods in aluminum cans will also feel the pain. We the consumers will face a higher cost of living.
Tariffs and other forms of protectionism will not bring back American industries. After decades of purchasing goods overseas, our industries have either lost their expertise or have become outdated for today’s marketplace. Many factories no longer exist.
It’s easy to blame China and Mexico for our job losses. Oftentimes, the enemy is much closer to home. Does anyone remember how Walmart bankrupted America’s over 66-year-old Rubbermaid and other good American companies? Since then, Amazon – another behemoth with the power to dictate prices – has already snuffed out a lot of its competition in general merchandise. Now, their CEO aims to become “the empire of everything.”
Our nation’s ongoing trade deficit is cause for concern because it’s financed with debt owed to our trading partners, held mostly in U.S. Treasury securities. In January 2018, the European Union owned $1.3 trillion, China $1.1 trillion, and Japan $1 trillion. The day that China demands repayment on the debt, the fun time would be over.
“Trade wars are good and easy to win,” A few more quotes like that and he won’t get a second term!
It’s a great pity that good decent companies can go bankrupt by treating their employees fairly whereas unscrupulous businesses go from strength to strength on the backs of little kids in the Third World working 15 hour days.
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John, sadly for America and the world, we have a president who says whatever comes to his mind, without knowing the full facts and complexities of the issue.
Walmart’s business model has hurt our lives in innumerable ways. Now, Amazon is taking it to another level. Spreading the pain.
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Thank you for a very clear explanation as to how a deficit comes about and how it can impact our everyday lives in the U.S.
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Bernadette, we’ve become so accustomed to using foreign-made products that we forget how this adversely affects our way of life.
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Reblogged this on Guyanese Online.
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Thanks for sharing, Cyril. Have a great week 🙂
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Pingback: Why should we care about the trade deficit? – By Rosaliene Bacchus
Thanks for the re-blog, GuyFrog 🙂
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Good Article
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Thanks for dropping by 🙂
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No matter what the President does, he’ll make friends in certain industries or sectors, with other “winners” like him. He doesn’t care about unintended consequences. The people negatively impacted are just “losers.”
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Sadly true, JoAnn.
Our Revolution will not be televised; at least, not by the Mainstream Media. Later today, at 4:00 p.m. PT, I’ll be tuning in to the Young Turks YouTube channel for Bernie Sanders’ town hall broadcast.
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Some nuanced perspective is needed in this debate. America’s economic choices are not restricted to the trade war protectionism of Trump nor to the laissez-faire globalization of neoliberalism. Millions of people all over the world vehemently opposed the failed Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) pushed by President Obama because it allowed powerful multinational corporations immunity from the environmental and labor laws of sovereign nations. This provision, known as the Investor-State Dispute Settlement (ISDS), was (and still is) a blatant circumvention of democracy.
Trump’s motives are not shared by these pro-democracy supporters, He is, in contrast, an ultra-nationalist hell bent on dangerous confrontation for his own self-interest. Free markets don’t have to be unfair markets. Somewhere in the middle is a relatively happy medium.
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I agree, Robert, we have to find a “relatively happy medium” in our trade relations. A fairer trade is possible and is already taking place.
For those who would like to learn more about the Fair Trade movement, check out my article “Fair Trade: Very Useful Websites” available on my website at the link below:
http://rosalienebacchus.com/articles/FairTrade_VeryUsefulWebsites.html
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Great article!
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The fun time will be over indeed Rosaliene. When the blind eye opens we will collapse under the enormity of the cosequences created by fools.
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It’s a tragic testimony of our human frailty: the blind eye that cannot see the folly of putting our self-interests before the common good.
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As misguided as the President is, I am even more disturbed by the docility, opportunism, and enablement provided by almost all of those legislators on the political right. If nothing else, they demonstrate how something called conscience is not a lion that can only be tamed with a whip and a chair, but a mouse who puts up but little resistance and surrenders with only a peep.
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I, too, am disturbed by the complicity and collaboration on the political right. My conclusion: the current chaotic situation serves their purpose and designs.
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In my mind, Rosaliene, the deficit is merely a symptom of a much bigger problem – the fact that under our current monetary system money can only be created as debt when private banks issue loans. That’s where 98% of the money comes from in the US. Only 2% is issued by the government as coins and banknotes. Every time a person goes to the bank to take out a mortgage or uses their credit card, the bank creates the money out of thin air (by pushing buttons on a computer). The same thing happens when the US government spends money they don’t have – the banks create it out of thin air. The problem with this type of monetary system is that if a government pays off all their debt, there will be no money in circulation unless private individuals and businesses go to the bank and borrow money.
I belong to a group called Positive Money New Zealand, which is part of Positive Money UK and the International Movement for Monetary Reform. They don’t have a US branch as yet, but they have one in Canada and Puerto Rico: https://internationalmoneyreform.org/members/
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Thanks for the sharing the link, Dr. Bramhall. It was heartening to note that several countries have joined the movement for changing our current debt-based monetary system.
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thank you for the economics lesson, Rosaliene!
makes me care more 🙂
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While I’m good at my own home economics, being thrifty, recycling, and all, I don’t know much about US or world economy. Your helpful explanation has opened my eyes and mind to this issue. I’m likely to pay more attention to it, now.
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Glad you found my article helpful, JoAnna.
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