Trade Wars and Tariffs

Once again, you're just saying "10% for all." You're not even attempting to present any logic.

The logic is instead of having 200 different agreements on the front end, you start with one standard and hammer out the custom details from there. Maybe a deal is struck in 30 minutes to revert from 10/10 to the exact points agreed to 20 years ago (I doubt that that happens). But both sides likely have issues to address even if basing that specific agreement around the AUSFTA. I doubt that the AUSFTA terms are as simple as they might sound. When does the current agreement sunset? Dumping? Subsidies in certain industries? Are there provisions for addressing unbalanced activity? Is there language to prevent China from avoiding US tariffs by routing goods through Australia?
 
china has taken the long term approach with those moves. so there isn't the immediate pain that drives the decision making of today. and even with the long term issues, with them being long term known issues they can be planned for.

Trump's tariffs are both short and long term pain, and there can be no planning for them because no one, including Trump, has a clue what they will be tomorrow yet alone 6 months from now. and worse for the US there is no guarantee that even if Trump gets the tariff deals he wants it will result in the manufacturing returning in a manner that actually changes our economy.

the 50s, 60s, and 70s, were complete unicorns as far as world wide manufacturing. even if every manufacturing job came back home we wouldn't have close to the same level of success.

Our guarantee is access to the US consumer. We have the better hand. We need to get something in return for that access and it doesn’t have to simply be tariff revenue.

How’d the planning work out with China grabbing space in the South China Sea and building islands for military instillations? If they move on Taiwan are we gonna nuke them, or is it better to have a unified economic response?
 
It’s more tolerable to steal IP, dump products to drive others completely out of major industries, fail to contain deadly viruses that kill a couple million people, run labor camps, grab territory in the South China Sea, disregard environmental regulations… ?
Apparently so, given the quoted article. What the article highlights is that if we can't be a reliable trading partner then countries will find a replacement.
 
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The logic is instead of having 200 different agreements on the front end, you start with one standard and hammer out the custom details from there. Maybe a deal is struck in 30 minutes to revert from 10/10 to the exact points agreed to 20 years ago (I doubt that that happens). But both sides likely have issues to address even if basing that specific agreement around the AUSFTA. I doubt that the AUSFTA terms are as simple as they might sound. When does the current agreement sunset? Dumping? Subsidies in certain industries? Are there provisions for addressing unbalanced activity? Is there language to prevent China from avoiding US tariffs by routing goods through Australia?

So instead of having 200 custom deals, we put blanket tariffs on everyone... and then work out custom deals.

That's some kind of logic right there.
 
Apparently so, given the quoted article. What the article highlights is that if we can't be a reliable trading partner then countries will find a replacement.

We aren’t unrealible. It a BS narrative that countries will walk away and find a replacement. It’s very lucrative to sell to the biggest economy on the planet.
 
china has taken the long term approach with those moves. so there isn't the immediate pain that drives the decision making of today. and even with the long term issues, with them being long term known issues they can be planned for.

Trump's tariffs are both short and long term pain, and there can be no planning for them because no one, including Trump, has a clue what they will be tomorrow yet alone 6 months from now. and worse for the US there is no guarantee that even if Trump gets the tariff deals he wants it will result in the manufacturing returning in a manner that actually changes our economy.

the 50s, 60s, and 70s, were complete unicorns as far as world wide manufacturing. even if every manufacturing job came back home we wouldn't have close to the same level of success.

Tariffs are literally the worst way to bring manufacturing jobs back to America. Removing tariffs on input goods is a better move than adding tariffs on finished products.

Subsidies are a better solution than tariffs, and this can be demonstrated by undergrad econ students using a graph similar in simplicity to that of a supply/demand curve.

Cut red tape. Streamline regulatory practices, remove unnecessary barriers to entry, etc. etc. These are the ways to encourage manufacturing without trying to take a wrecking ball to the economy.
 
Should be a good approach, because reasons.

Reimagining trade including provisions for addressing grossly unbalanced activity. A surplus with Australia doesn’t offset the huge, total net deficit. Let’s trend in a better direction. Let’s make it clear what we expect with reciprocity or alternative concessions. Let’s end giving away favorable terms so that dollar store crap is more affordable.
 
But they already are attempting to find replacements. They won't be able to replace us all together, but they will where and when they can.

They mad. They’ll come around.

BRICS is already trying something similar. And it’s a **** show.

Alliances and coalitions can be formed, but they’ll find out quickly that it ain’t easy to replace the protected trade routes, settling transactions, revenue from US markets, national security, natural disaster responses, and other benefits that come with being on friendly terms with the big dog.
 
Our guarantee is access to the US consumer. We have the better hand. We need to get something in return for that access and it doesn’t have to simply be tariff revenue.

How’d the planning work out with China grabbing space in the South China Sea and building islands for military instillations? If they move on Taiwan are we gonna nuke them, or is it better to have a unified economic response?
the us consumer who is going to be living in more inflation. the goods we make are going to be more expensive than their counterpart. energy, labor, regulation. those three things are going to drive costs up. we are hoping, with no evidence to back it up, that the increased wages, more inflation, offset the rise in the cost of goods.

we have seen what its going to do with Home Depot, i think, having to remove products from their shelves. so we are going to pay more, for fewer options, while hoping that inflation magically doesn't happen.

bringing the work back here isn't some magic bullet.
 
We aren’t unrealible. It a BS narrative that countries will walk away and find a replacement. It’s very lucrative to sell to the biggest economy on the planet.
Us changing our trade terms on a whim is being very unreliable. The profit in selling to a large economy or a small economy still depends on price, terms, and volume.
 
Us changing our trade terms on a whim is being very unreliable. The profit in selling to a large economy or a small economy still depends on price, terms, and volume.

Other than China, which BTW… **** the CCP, who that matters is considering us too unreliable to trade with?

What about the opposite? Is Panama a reliable partner when they’re playing footsie with China?
 
the us consumer who is going to be living in more inflation. the goods we make are going to be more expensive than their counterpart. energy, labor, regulation. those three things are going to drive costs up. we are hoping, with no evidence to back it up, that the increased wages, more inflation, offset the rise in the cost of goods.

we have seen what its going to do with Home Depot, i think, having to remove products from their shelves. so we are going to pay more, for fewer options, while hoping that inflation magically doesn't happen.

bringing the work back here isn't some magic bullet.

But we’ll have toilet paper and PPE.

Labor here might cost more here than exploited workers somewhere else, but there’s also income taxes being paid with domestic wages.

We are a net exporter of energy.

We ought to import to avoid regulations? Just dump toxins in somebody else’s backyard? How about instead fixing oppressive regulation here?
 
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