https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/trump-tariffs-trade-gimmickry-by-dani-rodrik-2018-03
Trump’s
Trade Gimmickry
The imbalances and inequities generated by the global economy cannot be
tackled by protecting a few politically well-connected industries, using
manifestly ridiculous national security considerations as an excuse. Such
protectionism is a gimmick, not a serious agenda for trade reform.
CAMBRIDGE – US President
Donald Trump’s bark on trade policy has so far been far worse than his bite.
But this may be changing. In January, he raised tariffs on imported washing
machines and solar cells. Now, he has ordered steep tariffs on imported steel and
aluminum (25% and 10%, respectively), basing the move on a rarely used
national-security exception to World Trade Organization rules.
Many commentators have
overreacted to the possibility of tariffs, predicting a “trade war” and worse.
One expert called the steel and
aluminum tariffs the most significant trade restrictions since 1971, when
President Richard M. Nixon imposed a 10% import surcharge in response to the US
trade deficit, and predicted that, “It will have huge consequences for the
global trading order.” The Wall Street Journal wrote that Trump’s tariffs
were the “biggest policy blunder of his Presidency” – a remarkable claim in
light of the administration’s missteps over Russia, the FBI, North Korea,
immigration, taxation, white nationalism, and much else.
The reality is that Trump’s
trade measures to date amount to small potatoes. In particular, they pale in
comparison to the scale and scope of the protectionist policies of President
Ronald Reagan’s administration in the 1980s. Reagan raised tariffs and
tightened restrictions on a wide range of industries, including textiles,
automobiles, motorcycles, steel, lumber, sugar, and electronics. He famously
pressured Japan to accept “voluntary” restraints on car exports. He imposed
100% tariffs on selected Japanese electronics products when Japan allegedly
failed to keep exported microchip prices high.
Just as Trump’s policies
violate the spirit, if not the letter, of today’s trade agreements, Reagan’s
trade restrictions exploited loopholes in existing arrangements. They were such
a departure from prevailing practices that fear of a “new protectionism” became
widespread. “There is great danger that the system will break down,” one trade
lawyer wrote, “or that it will collapse
in a grim replay of the 1930s.”
Those warnings proved
alarmist. The world economy was not much affected by the temporary reversal
during the 1980s of the trend toward trade liberalization. In fact, it may even
have benefited. Reagan’s protectionism
acted as a safety valve that let off political steam, thereby preventing
greater disruptions.
And once the US
macroeconomy improved, the pace of globalization accelerated significantly. The
North American Free Trade Agreement, the WTO (which explicitly banned the
“voluntary” export restraints used by Reagan), and China’s export boom all
followed in the 1990s, as did the removal of remaining restrictions on
cross-border finance.
Trump’s protectionism may
well have very different consequences; history need not repeat itself. For one
thing, even though their overall impact remains limited, Trump’s trade
restrictions have more of a unilateral, in-your-face quality. Much of Reagan’s protectionism
was negotiated with trade partners and designed to ease the economic burden on
exporters.
The voluntary export
restraints (VERs) of the 1980s in autos and steel, for example, were
administered by the exporting countries. This allowed Japanese and European
companies to collude in raising their export prices for the US market. Indeed,
these companies may even have become more
profitable thanks
to US trade restrictions. There is little chance that South Korean exporters of
washing machines or Chinese exporters of solar cells will fare as well today.
Trump’s unilateralism will cause greater anger among trade partners, and thus
is more likely to generate retaliation.
Another contrast with the
Reagan-era measures is that we are living in a more advanced stage of
globalization, and the problems that have accompanied it are greater. The push
for hyper-globalization in the 1990s has created a deep division between those
who prosper in the global economy and share its values, and those who do not.
As a result, the forces of nationalism and nativism are probably more powerful
than at any time since the end of World War II.
While Trump’s policies
purportedly aim to restore fairness in global trade, they exacerbate rather
than ameliorate these problems. As Jared Bernstein and Dean Baker point out, Trump’s tariffs are
likely to benefit a small minority of workers in protected industries at the
expense of a large majority of other workers in downstream industries and
elsewhere. The imbalances and inequities generated by the global economy cannot
be tackled by protecting a few politically well-connected industries, using
manifestly ridiculous national security considerations as an excuse. Such
protectionism is a gimmick, not a serious agenda for trade reform.
A serious reform agenda
would instead rein in the protection of drug companies and skilled
professionals such as physicians, as Bernstein and Baker argue. It would
address concerns about social dumping and policy autonomy by renegotiating the
rules of the WTO multilaterally. And it would target areas where the gains from
trade are still very large, such as international
worker mobility, instead of areas that benefit only special
interests.
But it is in the domestic
arena that the bulk of the work needs to be done. Repairing the domestic social
contract requires a range of social, taxation, and innovation policies to lay
the groundwork for a twenty-first-century
version of the
New Deal. But with his corporate tax cuts and deregulation, Trump is moving in
the opposite direction. Sooner or later, the disastrous nature of Trump’s
domestic agenda will become evident even to his voters. At that point, an
old-fashioned trade war may seem irresistible, to provide distraction and
political cover.
Writing for PS since 1998
141 Commentaries
141 Commentaries
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Dani Rodrik is Professor of International Political Economy at Harvard
University’s John F. Kennedy School of Government. He is the author of The Globalization Paradox: Democracy and the Future
of the World Economy, Economics
Rules: The Rights and Wrongs of the Dismal Science, and, most recently, Straight Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane World
Economy.
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