Comment by saint_fiasco

Comment by saint_fiasco 2 days ago

12 replies

> From a national security standpoint this can be deadly in a hot conflict.

What about a cold conflict? How much do the tariffs and protectionist policies cost in the middle to long run?

For example, the Jones Act costs billions per year and has been going on for a lot of years. How many additional aircraft carriers and submarines and so on could the US have bought with that money?

kranke155 2 days ago

Tariffs and protectionist policies are unfairly maligned. They are effectively the only way countries build and rebuild industries. The idea that they are bad is an invention of bad economists who don't study history. See the book "How Asia Works" for an accurate economic history of the growth of industrial power in Asia, how it was based on Germany's ascension before it, and how it was al built on the RIGHT kind of policies. https://www.gatesnotes.com/How-Asia-Works

Successful Asian powers studied history, not Milton Friedman. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historical_school_of_economics

  • trashtester 2 days ago

    Tariffs that merely offset subsidies in the other country has zero net effect on competition, and doesn't harm producers on either side unduely.

    The net effect is merely a net transfer from the foreign government to the domestic one.

    Tariffs that go BEYOND the subsidies in the foreign country has a net protectionist effect. This CAN cause stagnation in the industry in question. But less so if there is still healthy domestic competition.

    Subsidies are potentially the most destructive measure. This is especially true for protectionist subsidies, and less so for export subsidies. But in general, subsides sets up a cash transfer facility between a government and local industry, often removing incentives to innovate. In turn, this means that the subsidies need to increase year by year to have the desired effect.

    This can lead to the subsidized industry dying a sudden death once public patience for the growing subisides (and so the subisides themselves) come to an end.

    • kranke155 2 days ago

      Read “How Asia Works” on how subsidies can be used effectively.

      The book calls it “export discipline”, that is, you keep the subsidised firms on their toes by demanding them to be exporters and win the global market, thus making them remain competitive.

  • saint_fiasco 2 days ago

    I don't disagree, you can definitely build more industries with tariffs and protectionism. I just don't see the point.

    I'm a consumerist at heart. As long as consumers get to consume, it does not matter to me whose industry is doing the producing.

    I get that your foreign suppliers can turn on you and raise prices. I think the money you make during peacetime by not putting tariffs will let you buy more weapons and bribe more allies so that the foreign suppliers don't try anything too awful with the supply chains. Stockpiles can buy a lot of time to restart industry in an emergency or at least find a different foreign supplier.

    Take a look at Russia, they are sanctioned by half the planet and they still keep going on a reduced industry because they had huge stockpiles of tanks, artillery and so on. Imagine something like that but with a military that doesn't suck. Nobody would even dare try a sanction.

    • kranke155 2 days ago

      The point is that unfortunately geopolitics ends up in an eternal competitive state.

      Losing your industrial base and giving it away to a geopolitical competitor is almost certainly an error in the long run.

      Large industrial bases also are correlated with healthier middle class societies, according to Vaclav Smil, and in my experience, he’s exactly right.

      So losing the industrial base is fine for you, a service sector worker, but it’s bad for the country and it’s bad for society, if you want it to have a healthy middle class.

      • saint_fiasco 2 days ago

        Most of the country works in the service sector. It's not like I'm some kind of out of touch elite.

        The ones who are most hurt by tariffs, most affected by higher prices, are the working class. Sure, the workers of the specific industries that are lucky enough to be protected, the ones with the most persuasive lobbies, will certainly benefit. But every other worker will be a little worse off.

        If you are concerned about the people who got hurt by globalization, maybe the government should collect money from people like us and spend it on people like them. They can set up the tax in such a way that rich people pay the most.

        But if you use tariffs to help the people who got hurt by globalization, you cannot set it up in such a careful way. It's a blunt instrument that hurts productivity across the board and increases the prices to the end consumer. It becomes an implicit tax that poor people pay the most. An actual explicit tax would hurt much less.

    • itsoktocry 2 days ago

      >I don't disagree, you can definitely build more industries with tariffs and protectionism. I just don't see the point.

      You don't see the point of building up, say, your domestic chip building capacity? Really?

      >Take a look at Russia, they are sanctioned by half the planet and they still keep going on a reduced industry because they had huge stockpiles of tanks

      Russia can "keep going" because they have vast reserves of fossil fuels that Europe, currently, can't live without.

Qwertious a day ago

Tariffs specifically targeting subsidies are good. Tariffs in a vacuum are bad. Protectionist policies are bad.