|
Two weeks ago, both the administration and the Fed announced with straight
faces that the recession was over and the signs of economic recovery were clear.
Then last week, the president made a stunning decision that signals the administration's
determination to repeat the mistakes of the Great Depression. Much like the
Smoot-Hawley Tariffs that set off a global trade war and effectively doomed
us to ten more years of economic misery, Obama's decision to enact steep tariffs
on Chinese imported tires could spark a trade war with the single most important
trading partner we have. Not only does China manufacture a whole host of products
that end up on American store shelves, they are also still buying our Treasury
debt.
One has to wonder why this course of action is being undertaken if the administration
really believes its own statements about economic recovery. Why are they still
trying to fix something they have supposedly already fixed? The most troubling
thing is the rhetoric about free trade given to justify this. The administration
claims it is merely enforcing trade policies and that this is necessary for
free trade. This sort of double speak demonstrates a gross misunderstanding
of free trade, economics and world history. Yet these are the same people the
country trusts to solve our problems. This sort of thing should remove all
doubt about the credibility of the decision makers in Washington.
The truth is this will hurt American consumers by driving up prices of tires
and cars. This will also complicate matters for our already crippled manufacturing
and agricultural industries, if and when China retaliates against US made products.
Whatever jobs might be saved in the tire and steel industries here as a result
of this protectionist measure will likely be lost in other American industries.
It is even doubtful that those jobs will be saved, as cheap tires can be obtained
from other places like Mexico instead. It is difficult to see any real winners
among all the losers where trade wars are concerned. If Unions think this is
beneficial to them, they are being penny-wise and pound foolish.
Free trade with all and entangling alliances with none has always been the
best policy in dealing with other countries on the world stage. This is the
policy of friendship, freedom and non-interventionism and yet people wrongly
attack this philosophy as isolationist. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Isolationism is putting up protectionist trade barriers, starting trade wars
imposing provocative sanctions and one day finding out we have no one left
to buy our products. Isolationism is arming both sides of a conflict, only
to discover that you've made two enemies instead of keeping two friends. Isolationism
is trying to police the world but creating more resentment than gratitude.
Isolationism is not understanding economics, or other cultures, but clumsily
intervening anyway and creating major disasters out of minor problems.
The government should not be in the business of giving out favors to special
interests or picking winners and losers in the market, yet this has been most
of what has consumed politicians' attention in Washington. It has reached a
fevered pitch lately and it needs to end if we are ever to regain a functional
and prosperous economy.
|