Commentary: We are on the cusp of relearning the impacts of trade wars
To be honest, it appalls me how many good meaning people misunderstand international trade. In normal times, it would not matter because the role of peaceful trade has been a largely settled intellectual consensus for close to a century.
t is a background issue to most of our lives.
Today, the consensus has vanished for all the wrong reasons. It wasn’t challenged on facts or theory. It disappeared because so many folks just don’t understand the issue and are succumbing to demagogues exploiting that lack of knowledge.
I think a good analogy to this is vaccinations for polio. Within a generation of the last trade war, the polio vaccine radically altered the lives of Americans. Prior to that, young healthy people routinely died of a disease whose appearance led to citywide panics, and the closing of schools, parks and pools. That has not occurred for more than 60 years, so today only parents in their very late 80s or older recall the visceral fear of the disease killing or maiming their children. Today, demagogues spread lies about vaccines to a public rendered susceptible through ignorance. The number of children who avoid vaccines is becoming dangerously high.
As with polio pandemics, the deep damage of the last trade war has passed from common memory. Only a few centenarians will remember it. So, with the distance of time, we are all at risk by not schooling ourselves on the benefits and costs of trade. Now, I don’t know how much of the ignorance of trade is willful and how much of it is casual, but I like to assume the best of folks. So, let me explain briefly and plainly what trade is and what it is not.
First, all trade deals exist to reduce the barriers to trade between people and businesses. Countries don’t trade. When you hear someone say we are trading with China, that is simply a shorthand expression for households buying and selling to one another. We Americans buy and sell things to the Chinese with minimal government involvement. As consumers, we buy based on value, and as producers, we sell based on value. Cost is only a part of that value proposition. It is that simple.
Second, no household, city, region or nation runs a balanced trade with other places. The reasons for this are simple. Each of us specializes in some sort of production (e.g. barbering, teaching, doctoring) but do not specialize in consumption of just one good. We’ll buy different items from different people who make these items in different regions. It is that simple.
Third, the balance of trade does not affect the level of jobs or production in the United States. The reason for this is that every dollar spent on an imported good must be offset by either an exported good or foreign investment in the United States. So, if we import a trillion dollars of goods each year, the sum of our exports and foreign investment in the US must equal a trillion dollars. It is that simple.
[quote]Or, it is simple to tell folks a half-lie by talking about imports costing jobs. After all, we see factories closing all the time, right? Well, not so much now because we are currently experiencing the longest uninterrupted manufacturing employment growth in history.[/quote]
Obviously, these three facts are easy to twist and confuse a public not thinking deeply about the issue. It is easy to talk about ‘bad trade deals’ as if it was akin to buying a used car. It is easy to sound deeply sophisticated by talking about ‘balanced’ trade when no such thing exists anywhere. Or, it is simple to tell folks a half-lie by talking about imports costing jobs. After all, we see factories closing all the time, right? Well, not so much now because we are currently experiencing the longest uninterrupted manufacturing employment growth in history. This is happening at the same time as record trade deficits. You have to lie about facts to convince folks trade is bad.
Now, it is also good to note that trade tends to lower prices and add abundance to our choices. At the same time, it shifts the demand for labor away from certain occupations and into other ones. The occupational shift is from low-productivity jobs to high-productivity jobs. While the lower prices benefit us all, the shift of occupations benefits only some workers and imposes a cost on others. The problem is that we only really see the costs. That makes us susceptible to lies about the overall effect of trade. In the end, the anti-vaccine and the anti-trade crowd represent two sides of the same problem; a raw lack of understanding coupled with a lifetime of distance from the last deep negative consequences.
This brings me to a hopeful point. With the United States careening mindlessly towards a global trade war, we have the chance to re-learn an important lesson. It will be costly, of course, but we are likely to be reminded of the benefits of trade in the same way an outbreak of polio will remind us of the benefits of vaccines.

Michael J. Hicks, PhD, is the director of the Center for Business and Economic Research and the George and Frances Ball distinguished professor of economics in the Miller College of Business at Ball State University. Hicks earned doctoral and master’s degrees in economics from the University of Tennessee and a bachelor’s degree in economics from Virginia Military Institute. He has authored two books and more than 60 scholarly works focusing on state and local public policy, including tax and expenditure policy and the impact of Wal-Mart on local economies.

Well said Dr. Hicks. Trump has no clue what he is talking about when it comes to trade. The people who voted for Trump were obviously fooled by his lies, not surprising considering most Trump voters are not well educated.
The real question is what to do about the robots. I don’t see how trucking jobs and factory jobs will not be replaced by robots in the next 10 to 20 years. Who will the Trump voters vote for then?
Though Dr. Hicks and I agree on much, trade is not one of them. Dr. Hicks is correct that trade agreements make it easier for consumers in global markets to trade easier. Trade deals have been around for centuries and like Dr. Hicks stated, they are negotiated deals. What Dr. Hicks fails to mention is that countries negotiate in their own self-interest. Canada for instance has been a good trading partner but make no mistake, they do their best to protect workers (jobs) in Canada. The Canadian government subsidizes key markets in order to protect jobs. The dairy market is one of them. The timber market is another, etc. The United States does the same thing. The U.S. is quickly becoming the largest oil exporter in the world, yet it was just a few years ago, oil crude could not be legally exported from the United States.
When the President of the United States talks about poor trade deals, he is talking about negotiations that have resulted in middle class jobs being exported to countries in exchange for access to markets for larger ticket items like medical technology, aerospace and entertainment. Take Canada for instance. Canada has a restriction on how much foreign produced daytime tv can be viewed. 50% of the daytime hours must be produced by Canadian companies in order to protect those jobs. Sure, shows like Oprah, Dr. Phil, etc., can make it on channels but many shows get shut out. Canada’s government also offers tax incentives to lure film production to Canada. Hollywood, in order to gain more viewing in Canada, has transitioned production of shows previously shot in the U.S. to places like Toronto and Vancouver BC. California has lost 36,000 film jobs since 1997. Hollywood not only gained unrestricted access for their products filmed in Canada but they also took advantage of the tax incentives and the lower wages in Canada. As a business person, who wouldn’t want to add to the bottom line.
http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jul/23/business/la-fi-ct-runaway-20100723
https://www.dailynews.com/2014/01/04/middle-class-hollywood-workers-lose-jobs-income-when-filming-flees-los-angeles/
https://sputniknews.com/business/201806101065276105-trump-canada-dairy-g7-tariffs/
Dr. Hicks would have you think that trade deficits don’t affect jobs. Some of his liberal economist colleagues would disagree with him. The Economic Policy Institute, founded by Jeff Faux, Lester Thurow, Ray Marshall, Barry Bluestone, Robert Reich, and Robert Kuttner in 1986. You may recognize some of the heavy hitters on that list as former Labor Secretaries for Presidents, Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton. All of them have PhD degrees from places like Harvard, MIT, U.C. Berkley, Oxford, London School of Economics. They would tell you that trade deficits do affect jobs.
https://www.epi.org/blog/yes-trade-deficits-do-indeed-matter-for-jobs/
https://www.epi.org/
The President of the United States and his team are not opposed to trade. The U.S. needs trade in order to sell its goods and services globally. What they are opposed to is outdated trade agreements. Like any agreement, changes occur over time that affect the negotiated goods and services. Industries pop up that were not in the original agreement that countries wish to add to a new agreement. NAFTA is 24 years old and some provisions are out of date and new provisions are needed to protect intellectual property. Government subsidies of industries like film, agriculture and technology have to be negotiated. To many presidents were more concerned about their personal legacies versus getting the hard work done in order to advance the American worker. Politicians were bought and paid for by lobbyists in order to keep the status quo. Right now, the American economy Is hot and it’s time to press for an update on our outdated trade deals. We should do the deals while America is in a position of strength. Arizona teachers were some of the lowest paid teachers in America. With unemployment low, they opted to renegotiate their contracts with the state of Arizona. Governor Ducey recently signed a 20% pay increase for the teachers in Arizona. The teachers negotiated from a position of strength and won their pay increase. President Trump and his team will get a better deal for America, we just need to let them negotiate. Sure, it looks ugly in the press and media but being president isn’t supposed to be easy.
https://azgovernor.gov/governor/news/2018/05/governor-ducey-signs-20-percent-increase-teacher-pay-0
Daryl Hensley, Jasper
Thank you for your comment. After I read the Hicks article I was yet again dismayed by what our young people are being thought in our colleges today. But, thankfully, we still have people that are willing to step up and challenge the status quo thinking.
Although I realize the gentleman’s comment on the Hicks article is well intended, yet again it shows that calling President Trump supporters uneducated sums up where he is coming from.
Thanks to him for reminding me how glad and proud I am to be a registered Democrat and still be able to support a president that is finally willing and able to resist the people that want to continue with the career thinkers and politicians.