Trump’s Trade War Hits Businesses and End Users, but Spares Steel Lobby Cronies

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Trump’s trade war is taking its toll. The tariffs are hitting end users and businesses hardest, but the steel lobby cronies seem to be safe.

August 20, 2018

By: Bobby Casey, Managing Director GWP

trump trade war croniesNothing invokes change quite like a swift kick in the pocketbook. There are a few folks out there (myself included) who are entitled to a hearty “I told you so” with regards to Trump’s trade war.

How is this trade war coming along?

Economic Hardships for Business

A recent Forbes article runs down the series of failures begotten by this unnecessary trade war. The war on trade is to Trump, what the war on terror was to Bush: totally fabricated and wildly exaggerated to push a personal agenda. And consequently, private citizens and individuals are the ones who will pay.

  • One of the last television assembly companies left in the United States is Element Electronics. They will be laying off nearly all of their 126 workers and closing down their factory in South Carolina.
  • Alaska has been pitching China to buy their seafood for years. Alaska certainly isn’t the only one who can provide these goods, but the recent retaliatory tariffs imposed by China on Pacific Northwest seafood has pretty much sealed the fate of Alaska’s prospect to get Chinese business.
  • Harley-Davidson decided to move some of its production to the EU to avoid their tariffs, and Trump supports the impending boycott they face. He chased off American production by starting a trade war and treats the defensive inversion of these businesses like treason. Was he really expecting Harley-Davidson to just suck it up and pay a needless tariff to the EU?

Agriculture in Particular

A fact-check article in the Tampa Bay Times reported on a claim that agricultural producers take a disproportionate hit with regards to retaliatory tariffs.

“Exports comprise 10 percent of total GDP in the United States, whereas they comprise about 20 percent of GDP in the American agricultural sector. That fraction is even higher for crops like cotton (76 percent is exported), soybeans (50 percent) and wheat (46 percent), according to USDA.

“About 16 to 17 percent of exports to China are agricultural goods, so any conflict with China (like the ongoing one) takes a heavy toll on agriculture, Laborde said. [Research fellow at the International Food Policy Research Institute, David Laborde] calculated that 86.8 percent of agricultural exports to China are impacted by retaliatory tariffs while 36.9 percent of the non-agricultural exports are covered.

Farmers face two additional aggravators: Their products are easily replaceable and they’re an easy political target.”

Soybean growers are faced with as much as a 20% drop in prices, but risk losing foreign customers because the trade policies coming out of the US make them “unreliable” providers. The truth is, the US isn’t the only show in town. China can easily turn to its ally in BRICS, Brazil.

A shipment of 70,000 tons of soybeans was docked off the coast of China for several weeks because it arrived 30 minutes late to beat the implementation of the soybean tariffs. Thirty minutes.

The $20 million shipment of soybeans became a $26 million shipment over 30 minutes.

China’s Sinograin agreed to pay the 25% tariff and receive the shipment, but not without the Chinese people taking to social media:

“‘Isn’t Sinograin state-owned? Who is this tariff hurting? Eventually it is us paying the tariffs and it’s us being sanctioned!’ said one user.

“Two posts about the ship’s arrival in dock and the extra costs generated more than 800 comments, mostly negative.

“‘Are we imposing sanction on ourselves? Common people will have to pay for that,’ said another Weibo user.”

The Chinese are realizing that which many ardent Trump supporters have not yet: countries don’t pay tariffs because countries don’t trade. Businesses and end users pay tariffs because businesses and end users trade.

Economic Hardships for End Users

The US can be generally very independent when it comes to energy, but not entirely independent. The US agricultural and energy industries still rely on cheap procurement of aluminum and steel to keep going.

What happens to the cost of oil and food when those who rely on foreign imports to get them these basic commodities in the middle of a trade war?

CEO of American Petroleum Institute warns the hike in price for specialty steel will raise the cost of domestic production of oil, natural gas, and natural gas liquids.

Cronyism

True to form, there’s always a backdoor out of everything. And that backdoor lacks any transparency or accountability. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross planned to grand exemptions to “some American businesses”, but there was no real objective evaluation process put into place to ensure that the exemptions were equitable.

Not surprisingly, according to the CRS (Congressional Research Service), there have been a deluge of exemption applicants:

The CRS report also said tariff revenue could be reduced by exemptions given by the US Commerce Department. As of Aug 6, the department had received more than 33,000 exclusion requests, approving 1,428 requests, while denying 702, CNBC reported.”

With no real process in place, you have to wonder about the 1,428 approved exemptions, right? How did they manage to get to the other side with no real guidance, process, qualification or even knowing which officials are responsible for making these determinations?

I remember hearing in an interview with Ron Paul and Adam Kokesh and around 4:25 Adam asks, “Why do governments invite conspiracy theories?” Ron Paul responded that, “Governments like secrecy.” People are generally marginalized as “conspiracy theorists” when they challenge what the government is doing or question what’s happening behind the vail. But Ron Paul concludes with, “Why is the government so stupid? If it doesn’t like conspiracy theories, why does it set the stage for them?”

You get more trust with transparency then you do secrecy. When you have statements like this, is it totally unreasonable to suggest the system is rigged?

The opportunity for cronyism is apparent and U.S. steel manufacturers have, according to multiple media reports, successfully exerted significant control over the exemption-granting process.”

“… [N]ot a single application has been accepted if U.S. Steel or another domestic steelmaker had objected to its granting. Because there is no publicly available rubric for the granting or denying of exemption application—nor any opportunity to appeal the department’s decisions—businesses are left entirely at the mercy of government officials and the steel lobbyists who appear to be directing the process.

While numerous congressional representatives have balked at this ridiculous process, they haven’t taken much action in the way of reigning in the Commerce Department.

So now the tariffs also smack of Obama’s Affordable Healthcare crusade: large sweeping costly policy, but a few friends get exceptions. In Trump’s case it’s the Steel Lobby… for Obama it was Unions.

Governments will never lead individuals to greatness. Individuals can only do that. These major boondoggles from senseless invasions under Bush, irresponsible mandates under Obama, and reckless tariffs and protectionism under Trump has systematically destroyed the entrepreneurial and free market spirit of the United States.

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2 Responses

  1. Found the article interesting, but as usual only one sided. So who ever wrote the article needs to shop routinely to see how food prices, gas, healthcare and essential everyday items continue to increase in price over the last decade or more. So it is OK for the US to pay tariffs, but we cannot retaliate on those countries who set tariffs on us or present barriers to our products: France, China and the European Union. Who’s the dummy?? We are for years. Man up and stop whining about everything. Cronyism, transparency is a joke. Name me ONE country in the world which is totally transparent or even 50% transparent.
    Everyone wants free trade, but on THEIR terms. In a truly free market, HONEST competition wins and the end user benefits. But each country has special incentives for their industries or allowances along with the US. US is NOT perfect, and I am not jumping up and down waving the US flag for our international trade programs, but again, China and Europe is coming to the table to “work out win-win agreement” which will eventually benefit all.

    1. Overall cost of living is going up because of inflation. What causes the inflation is multi-fold. So you could have the federal reserve debasing the dollar… you could have minimum wage laws that inflate the cost of labor… you could have regulations that inflate the cost of goods and production. California decided to hike it’s state fuel taxes by $0.40 per gallon back in November so that alone adds to the cost. Many factors that have nothing to do with the actual cost of the good or service are built into the end users’ cost… including tariffs.

      Healthcare is driven by tort, legislation predicated on a very distorted understanding of the insurance business model, and a very defunct entitlement system.

      No one said “it’s okay for the US to pay tariffs”. You took it that way, but that’s not what the article said at all. If you look at the overall trajectory of tariffs, they have been falling a great deal and inroads were being made. There was no need to do what Trump did. You say this is one-sided, but you missed the multiple articles which cover why this is a bad idea.

      For example in 1993, the US tariffs were an average of 5.6% while China’s was 39.1%. As of 2013, the US was at 3.4% and China at 9.6%. That’s a tremendous drop, and no real thanks to the failed trade war efforts of W. The thing is, your willingness to be tough and stick this out for the “greater good” at the end comes at the cost of jobs for Americans NOW… and detrimental trade relations afterward. Alaska stands no chance of getting Chinese business for their seafood after this. The soybean growers might get some business back, but by then China will have found another provider in Brazil with no real need to buy as much as they had before. It’s great that you feel so strongly about being fair and equitable, but the shortsightedness of that position is not something that should be shouldered by those that stand the most to lose.

      Is there any dignity in saying the US isn’t as bad as other countries? That sounds like the sort of response I get from Verizon when they screw me over… “It could’ve been worse if you were with AT&T”. Right… but how about don’t screw people over at all rather than “not as much”? Or should I be grateful to Verizon for not screwing me over as much as they could have? Who says stuff like that and honestly thinks people should be okay with that level of nonsense?

      Admitting the US isn’t perfect isn’t the same as calling out what’s wrong and taking a stand against it. You’re equivocating. It’s bad… but not as bad as it could be. If this article is one-sided at least it had the guts to take a side at all.

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