https://www.project-syndicate.org/commentary/trump-tariffs-how-to-respond-by-dani-rodrik-2025-02
How Not to
Respond to Trump’s Tariffs
Feb 6, 2025DANI RODRIK
Everyone knows that a schoolyard bully must be
met with determined opposition if he is to be deterred. But when it comes to
Donald Trump’s deranged trade tariffs, the best response is to remain calm,
back away, and let the bully keep punching himself.
CAMBRIDGE – By wielding the threat of imposing
across-the-board tariffs against Canada, Mexico, and China for no justifiable
reason, US President Donald Trump has demonstrated that he is a major risk for
America and its trade partners. But how other countries respond to Trump’s
reckless policies will ultimately determine how much damage the global economy
will sustain. America’s trade partners need to keep their cool and resist the
temptation to magnify the insanity.
Most analysts seem to believe that responding
in kind is the right thing to do. As expected, Canada and Mexico both
threatened retaliation and eventually reached deals with Trump to avert the
tariffs temporarily. But it is not clear why retaliation should be regarded as
normal and desirable when the tariffs that trigger them are viewed (correctly)
as crazy. Policymakers elsewhere must not lose sight of the truth that Trump
has chosen to disregard: the costs of tariffs are borne mainly at home.
The instinct to retaliate is natural. To deter
a schoolyard bully, one must confront him with determined opposition. But far
from dissuading Trump, other countries’ tariffs will further feed his misplaced
grievances. More importantly, the logic of retaliation fails in this instance.
The tit-for-tat model works to ensure cooperation in certain circumstances,
such as the prisoners’ dilemma. In this scenario, each actor
benefits from their own unilateral move, but is made worse off when the other
actor responds in kind. Trump’s tariffs do not fit this characterization.
Contrary to what Trump claims, US tariffs
are paid mostly by American consumers
and firms that use imported inputs. Thus, the “optimum tariff” argument by which a country could
gain by exercising monopoly power on world markets does not seem to apply.
Selective trade protection can occasionally play a positive role as part of a broader agenda
for development or greener growth. But across-the-board tariffs hurt the US
economy, and more so than they do other economies. Trump’s America is a
prisoner entirely of its own making.
Likewise, retaliatory tariffs imposed by Canada
and Mexico would mainly harm their own economies. As smaller players in world
trade, they have even less ability to pass the costs of tariffs on to the
United States. The presence of supply chains in North American trade (as in
auto manufacturing) magnifies the costs of disruption, but does not alter the
fact that the costs of import tariffs are essentially domestic. In the language
of game theory, retaliation through import tariffs is not a “best response.”
Returning to the schoolyard bully analogy,
imagine that you face an aggressor who is attacking you for no good reason. He
seems mad, hitting himself with each wild swing of his arm. What should you do?
You could respond in kind and mimic what he is doing, but that would be equally
mad, since you would be hurting yourself even more in the process. The best
strategy, then, is to minimize the damage by staying as far from the bully as
you can and waiting for him to punch himself out and crumple in a corner.
To be sure, Canada, Mexico, China, and other
countries that will bear the brunt of Trump’s trade actions do not have the
luxury of insulating themselves from the US. They will feel some pain for sure.
But they should not make things worse for themselves by “pulling a Trump” on
their own economies. Some surgical retaliation against industries that support Trump
politically may be unavoidable for domestic political reasons. But common sense
and moderation should prevail, for the sake of their own countries and the
global economy on which they depend.
Some worry that Trump might feel vindicated if
others do not mount a strong response. But the surest way to put him in his
place is to downplay his threats and treat him as weak. The most effective
message America’s trade partners can give Trump is: “You are free to destroy
your own economy; we do not plan to do the same. We will turn instead to other, more
reliable trade partners, thank you very much.”
Moreover, America’s trade partners – even the
small ones – are not entirely powerless vis-à-vis the US. They have instruments
other than trade policy at their disposal. They can, for example, impose
profits taxes on domestic subsidiaries of specific American multinational
corporations. Gabriel Zucman of the Paris School of
Economics has suggested that Canada and Mexico place a
wealth tax on Elon Musk and make Tesla’s access to the Canadian market
conditional on paying it. This approach has the advantage of potentially
generating direct fiscal benefits at home.
In the wake of Trump’s actions, we should worry
about the prospects of a calamitous race to the bottom. During the 1930s, a
cycle of retaliation sent international trade into a tailspin and exacerbated
the global depression. Avoiding such an outcome today is of the utmost
importance. The good news is that the worst of the damage can be contained, and
the costs will be borne mostly by the US, if others don’t overreact. America’s
trade partners should keep calm and carry on.
Writing for PS since 1998
231 Commentaries
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Dani Rodrik, Professor of International
Political Economy at Harvard Kennedy School, is President of the International
Economic Association and the author of Straight
Talk on Trade: Ideas for a Sane World Economy (Princeton University Press, 2017).
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