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Trump is Wrong on Trade

Trump is Wrong on Trade
Profile photo of Frank Hollenbeck

manufactTrumps claims (see here) that America has lost high paying manufacturing jobs to China because the communist country promotes its exports through subsidies, tax advantages and currency manipulations. The reality is that we should not care what China does. The more China subsidizes its industries, the more its trading partners gain in the abundance of cheap goods and services and, contrary to what Trump believes, in the creation of high-paying jobs. In an exchange economy, there is a natural antagonism between producers and consumers. Producers benefit from scarcity, consumers from abundance. A producer wants to be the only store on a block selling a limited number of products for a limited period of time. Consumers, on the other hand, want abundance with more producers and products available over a longer period of time. This conflict arises naturally in an exchange economy. Robinson Crusoe hunting for himself will clearly prefer abundance to scarcity.

Competition promotes abundance while enabling income and wealth equality

In a non-competitive environment, high-paying jobs may occur in protected industries, but it depends on the ability of trade unions to capture a portion of the profits generated by monopolistic or oligopolistic firms by demanding higher wages. The pressure from non-union labor is a constant threat to these high-paying jobs created by government actions of artificial scarcity. Yet, there is no guarantee that this will bring higher paying jobs instead of just higher profits to these protected industries.

In a competitive environment where abundance is the norm, high-paying jobs come from high productivity. Our living standards are higher than those living in Africa not because we are smarter or work harder, but because our labor is grafted onto a much larger capital base. Robinson Crusoe will catch more fish with a net than with his hands. And the more nets he has, the more fish he will catch. His productivity is constantly increasing with more resources at his disposal.

Thus, high-paying manufacturing jobs in a highly competitive environment come from high value productivity. No one will pay you more than the value of what you produce1. Suppose you could make a five-piece widget that could sell for a subjectively high price of $100 per unit in a highly competitive widget industry. To make this widget you hire 100 workers who work on the widget independently and require 10 hours to complete one widget. Abstracting from other non-labor costs and profits, how much could you pay each worker? Less than $100 or $10 an hour. Now suppose you specialize and each worker works on only one of the five components of the widget. The gains from the division of labor allow you to make a widget in half the time or 5 hours. How much could you pay each now? Less than $100 or $20 per hour. Now suppose we add a machine that allow each worker to complete a widget in one hour. How much can workers expect now? Less than $100 or $100 per hour. High wages come from the division of labor and the abundance of capital. The greater the amount of capital, the greater the value productivity and, in a competitive environment, the greater the wages.

Of course, competition will ultimately reduce the price of widgets, reflecting growing abundance, and the nominal wages of this unskilled labor. Yet, if deflation is the norm, real incomes or the standard of living of the average worker will be constantly rising: every man benefiting from the increase in real wages resulting from more abundance or lower prices.

Now suppose that China subsidize its exports to the point that we can buy them essentially for free. This will mean that we no longer have to use scarce resources to produce these products at home and we can divert some of the capital from these industries (steel, textiles, etc.) to be used in other industries. With more capital, these other industries, ceteris paribus, will have higher paying jobs than before trade with China.

Trump’s trade policy is structured on creating scarcity. Trade restrictions do not increase the amount of capital but force a diversion of capital to import competing industries. Capital would be dispersed more widely and hence wages would be lower than they otherwise would be. His policy would lead to an economic reality that would be the exact opposite of what he is promoting.

The key word above is ceteris paribus. Trump is confusing association with causation.

The real culprit or cause of the loss of purchasing power is the American Central Bank. It is directly responsible for the growth in income inequality and the slow decline in living standard of the American middle class (see here). Monetary policy is “econspeak” for legal counterfeiting! A simple example will make this clear: Suppose we have $10 to spend on 10 apples; market forces normally will generate an equilibrium price of $1 per apple. If the amount of money doubles, prices will rise to $2. The government will have stealth taxed the public five apples. Few understand that the central bank is in reality a thief robbing the purchasing power of your money while you sleep. Although central bankers may attend fancy lunches in thousand-dollar suits, it does not diminish the reality that they are nothing more than counterfeiters. The only difference between them and the guy printing currency in his basement is they do not fear the police breaking down the doors of the Eccles building.

If Trump really wants to make America great again, he should seriously consider returning the U.S. to sound money (here). He should consider implementing a Chicago type plan (here) based on the creation of a new cryptocurrency.

There is another aspect of Trump’s trade policy that is not currently being discussed. He talks about bridges and cars soon to be built by American steel. But how would his administration respond to complaints by the big three automakers that Audi, Land Rover, BMW, Hyundai, and Toyota have unfair competitive advantage nationally and internationally by using low cost Chinese steel? Would he impose restrictions on all imports that use Chinese components as inputs? It is clear this would quickly escalate into trade wars where everybody loses. Globalization, or international competition, has led to razor thin margins, and Trump’s policy would put U.S. industry at a competitive disadvantage both nationally and internationally.

Trump also talks about fair trade. Again, we should be totally indifferent on whether China, or any other country, is or is not trading fairly. If fairness is a real concern, maybe the first action of a Trump presidency would be to shut down the Export-Import Bank which unfairly benefits U.S. exporters.

He also is misguided in thinking that trade is like negotiating with a supplier, where one gains at the expense of others. The best US policy, or that of any country, should be the elimination of all barriers to imports. This can be done unilaterally. Abundance should always be preferred to scarcity.

1 Something advocates of a higher minimum wage do not seem to understand.

  • B3

    will the cult of mises ever die

    • Frank Zeleniuk

      Doubt it! The days of Keynesianism and the central bank are numbered. Bow down!

      • B3

        Trump and Bernie are the grassroots, and both are classical Keynesians, and they tell you which way the wind is blowing. The Libertarian moment is over. Hillary is the closest thing to a neoliberal/Austerian (deficit hawk) this cycle. Ron Paul is nearly GlennBecking himself by withholding support for Trump and isn’t going to be relevant if he doesn’t come around. Today’s central bankers are operating according to a totally unKeynesian monetarism, and QE fails to generate any inflation outside the asset markets, and that mainly from influencing behavior not through adding any money. The Keynesianism of large public works and large tax cuts is coming back, and will prove that deficits don’t matter (Reagan’s mantra).

        Trump will likely win and cut taxes and spend into the stratosphere, triggering a boom. Alongside a tough trade and industrial policy, focusing on good paying jobs for working class people, there will again be a transition channel for deficit spending to go into people’s pockets. China’s retaliation might be floating the yuan; that equals a weaker dollar and higher interest rates. Trump will clear the private debt overhang with inflation, good wages and playing hardball with the bankers.

        We are so far from anything resembling Austrian / gold standard economics, it isn’t even on the map or part of the discussion. Evolutionary economics has shown that the Misesean idea of utilitarianism as the basis for individual action is unrealistic for rational, individual actors’ interests. Individuals don’t care about maximizing overall economic output; they care about their interests in their lifetimes. China has shown mercantilism is the way nations become trade and military behemoths, not by free trade/minarchy.

        If the Fed faces any challenge, it will come from nationalism: A Trump or Bernie type president taking power away from the NY FED/top 20 Wall street banks/primary dealers and breaking their control oof monetary policy, merging the non-NY Fed banks with the Treasury. Fiat in the West is not in danger at all. Trumpism/Bernie-ism is about national/public interest control of fiat money, not private gold backed notes.

        Russia/Asia may try a gold-exchange standard for settling trade balances and breaking the US reserve curency status, but that is a far cry from a clasical gold standard and balanced national budgets.

        • Frank Zeleniuk

          Your view is not uncommon but the question is, “Will the cult of Mises ever die?” The answer is “no”.
          **Fiat in the west is not in Danger at all.**
          Fiat is successful as long as confidence in the promises of the issuer can be upheld. The issuers are of course national governments. The move toward centralization on a global level means that national governments are selling their sovereignty to international interests. It means that national interests will be overridden and eventually their currencies will be as well. Of course, the movement towards a cashless society is a part of that.
          Essentially, you express a view as regards the timeframe of a government, and as you know governments are fleeting. That one can last a couple of hundred years is remarkable. We are almost at the end of the current western civilization and I think your view is rather myopic. We may progress to a one world government and that’ll be very destructive but as well an impermanent construction like any government - and slavery has not proven economically viable nor stable.

          • B3

            Well, as long as you acknowledge its a cult and is dead as far as having any influence in the wider world of policy and impacting history. Sure, when America and Europe’s states collapse under the strain of multicultural civil war and find themselves unable to collect taxes or enforce conscription, US notes will be worth less (if not worthless), but that is the least favorable environment for a classical gold standard/private bank money backed by assets. Such a breakdown would lead more toward credit-money systems operative within trust-based ingroups, exchange/sharing of services and trade of goods and services between allied groups.

            There are no ‘international interests.’ The temporary looting by corporate managers will just accrue industrial and military power to the State that eventually seizes that infrastructure and intellectual power in the wake of declining US military power. Whatever our internationalists are building overseas is gone once our military can’t hold it in face of national movements or rival regional powers. Whether due to corporate governance and incentives gone awry or the de-racinated identity of much of our business elite, the stripping of American assets and productive capacity is shortsighted and will end up advancing the interests of states, not internationalists.

            When these internationalists try to escape a West embroiled in civil unrest, it won’t escape with gold, just fiat, and so won’t have any bribe money worth a damn to the new world power.

            Russia and China, if not some Islamic power perhaps Iran and a Sunni behemoth to its East, will become the new regional players in a multi polar world, and USA will retrench to a Monroe doctrine developing and defending the western hemisphere, supposing it gains control of its internal unrest and imposes some engine of assimilation on its subjects. Whatever power transitions this entails, none of it bodes well for a classical gold standard, which was a product of stable European banking and government conditions under the aegis of British power and its economic doctrines. Those came crashing down after WW1, and have never recovered. There’s no reason to assume they ever will recover.

          • Frank Zeleniuk

            Alright! Thanks for your views and opinions.

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Articles
Profile photo of Frank Hollenbeck

Frank Hollenbeck, PhD, teaches at the International University of Geneva.

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