Yeah, I hate Trump, but it does seem true that the US' trade relationship with China is rather unfair with respect to tariffs, IP protection, and investment/subsidiary requirements.
It's not absurd if it gets us better terms. If my friend was selling me a car at a higher, off-market price, I'd still haggle ("pick fights" in your terms) with him. In fact, I'd push for a friend discount. He might even give the discount to me if he thought there was more value to be had in the long term relationship.
Would you push so hard that you destroy the friendship?
There’s nothing wrong with negotiating with friends, but when you go out of your way to constantly piss them off and threaten them, you’re not going to have any friends for long.
Negotiating for more favorable terms is destroying friendships now? Come on now. Obviously there's a boundary, but if there's a known market price, it's obvious when someone is being unreasonable.
You didn't say it, but the question you asked implies a stable friendship can be destroyed by "hard" negotiations. I disagree with that premise. Why?
Well, I'd argue that if you're seeking "fair value" and are 1) not unreasonable, 2) your friend is not unreasonable, and 3) there is more or less a market price or consensus about the value of an object, there is little no risk of destroying the friendship -- reasonable people can seek fair value and market transactions can support claims about value. If 1, 2, or 3 aren't in place then your friendship is on shaky ground already (someone is unreasonable) or the market for an object is just hard to price (and more information is required for reasonable people to come to a consensus.)
The problem here is (1). Yes, if everybody is reasonable, you’ll be fine. That’s completely not the case here. For example, you might threaten to harm them unless they concede something to you, which may work but is not going to keep friends.
Regarding global events, it looks like reasoned behavior prevailed in the end and the friendship is still in tact. None of my conditions were violated.
One important thing people miss is that majority of US exports are commodities. Take soybeans for example. Global soybean market has supply and demand balanced. US exports largely to China and Brazil to Europe. Now, due to tariffs China has started buying from Brazil leading to spike in Brazilian soybean and fall of US soybean price. Supply gets re-routed and market comes back to normal. China on the other hand exports finished goods which can't be re-routed. The larger players in the market know this - the Shanghai index is at a 3 year low which the Dow is at an all time high.
These articles on Chinese trade and barriers often mention forced technology transfer and IP theft. Can someone more knowledgeable than me explain the reality of this? It seems that it is such a large imposition I’m surprised anyone does business in China when you know 10-15 years later they will have copied your business.
Because on short term it opens you a big market (1+B users/customers).
Because if you don't go there, one of your competitors may go there.
Because some people still think that they will only lost low tech/low IP.
It's taken awhile for companies to catch on. The saga of how the Chinese stole the SU-27 plans from Russia (Licensed the fighter and planned to use Russian components and then switched to Chinese made components after a couple years) is among the ways they do it.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shenyang_J-11
The Russians were desperate for cash at the time and the Chinese were willing to pay. What the Russians didn't count on was the willingness to straight up steal the design and start manufacturing it in China. Companies have gotten a lot better about protecting their designs now but are up against the Chinese government.
> I’m surprised anyone does business in China when you know 10-15 years later they will have copied your business.
The Chinese market is huge - many executive types seemingly fall victim to hubris quite often - and this is no exception. That's the most charitable explanation possible.
The less charitable and more realistic way this happened in my opinion? No executive cares about 10-15 years from now. At most they are looking a couple years down the road for bonuses.
Largely the "IP theft" is really "IP transfer". In order to conduct business in China, most non-Chinese companies need to partner with a Chinese owned company, that partnership requires that the IP be shared between partner companies. Each Chinese owned company already has another partner, the Chinese Government. IP shared with the Chinese company is then shared with the Chinese Government. The Chinese Government than takes the IP that has been "shared" and they re-distribute that knowledge to other Chinese companies that can benefit. The Chinese government is sitting on massive amounts of IP that was knowingly "shared" That's why it seems the technology sector in China seemed super charged, because it was.
Make no mistake the Chinese government is actively trying to steal IP, but most of the IP it has was knowingly shared by Western companies desperate to lower costs and get access to the Chinese market.
I'm not at all a fan of tariffs, but another issue, in the consumer space anyway, is shipping costs - It can be cheaper to ship stuff from china than from the next state.
The whole issue of 'fair trade' is rather complex, as all actors attempt to skew the playing field to their benefit, as invisibly as possible. China appears to be quite good at the game.
Of course China is playing unfairly. Not many people disagree.
The argument has been that the West should fight China as a unified bloc as opposed to the unilateral tariffs being imposed. It makes no sense to alienate Canada, the EU, Japan, and South Korea when confronting China. All of those countries (and the EU) have serious grievances and would have provided the US additional leverage.
The current approach is rooted in showmanship rather than strategy. It’s meant to provide a spectacle.
If the other Western countries have grievences, then their trade policy will reflect those grievances even if there is no 'bloc?' and the result of all those countries implementing their policy will be similar to if they had done it as a group. right? And the article points out that the us is singled out by China's tarrifs, so the rest of the bloc would not act in the interest of the US. You also mention SK and Japan but those countries have even higher tarrifs than China for the US, so should they not also be made subject to the global market (ie be engaged in 'trade wars') ? If their trade policy can't survive the free market, why should they not change?
Looks like the US is the largest trading partner with China, how much leverage do you need? How long would it take a "unified bloc" to agree on doing anything?
>> How long would it take a "unified bloc" to agree on doing anything?
This is why most of the time the US does things unilaterally. Whether its militarily, economically or otherwise. We ask other countries if they want to stop China from laying huge tariffs on their products and they say, "Yes, for sure!" Then we say, "Okay, let's all impose tariffs on their imports and fight back!" and suddenly all those countries who were on board to do something suddenly get cold feet and don't want to get sucked into a trade war or deal with the short term consequences of standing up to them.
Also, these trade wars with China have been off and on since the 1970's if not earlier.
> suddenly all those countries [...] get cold feet
Seems like this is asking for a citation. That kind of rhetoric works for all purposes (surely EU trade negotiators have been similarly annoyed by US inaction on other issues, for example). If you have something specific to complain about, this is the place to do it.
Could you name a specific instance of asking other countries to impose tariffs on China? I'm in Canada, and can't recall the US ever asking.
Further, the US keeps one foot out of international tools like the WTO or the UN law of the sea, neutering the very mechanisms with which the rest of the world could coordinate action.
Europe's total trade is 696.3 billion (with 403.2 billion exported); however, subtracting out JUST the UK's 78.5 billion brings this down to 617.8 billion and 343.6 exported. Remove Russia and you're at 549.8 and 308.8 exported.
The US is 557 billion total with 409.2 exported. The US is China's biggest trading partner.
Let's not even get started on the fact that the US is the major buyer of Chinese goods - nobody buys more. The US imports more dollars worth of goods than any other region except Asia.
That's only one side story in US, all the arguments are for political or diplomatic goal. It's like a kid lost a game would claim unfairness ignoring all the established rules, just because he's not happy.
>> The current approach is rooted in showmanship rather than strategy. It’s meant to provide a spectacle.
Trump repeatedly said during his campaign he would go after China for their tariffs and how they manipulate their currency. For a lot of Trump voters, he's just following through with a campaign promise.
The two aren't mutually exclusive. Trump can be engaging in showmanship and following through with a campaign promise. I'm not saying the China tarrifs are spectacle, but the wall certainly is security theater.
Your argument (I think) is that we're successfully limiting Chinese trade effectivenes, and your argument is that their currency is dropping? You understand how these things work, right?
Sure, we've limited import of some small selection of items. And in exchange, everything else from China gets cheaper.
> Chinese manufacturing slowed in June
This seemed like such a whopper I actually followed the link. Chinese manufacturing growth slowed in June. That you conflate a derivative with the function tells me all I need to know about your seriousness.
Bill Clinton was very eager to get China into the WTO. Business and Industry and Clinton only saw gleeming $ signs. It blinded them to corruption, unfair practices, etc. They all had been warned about it.
They all thought they knew better and could bring China in line.
After Clinton, GWB didn’t even try. He was too distracted by bin Laden. Obama was trying to make nice to the rest of the world during his first term, then got embroiled with the unrest he started in the ME. They had all forgotten about blue collar America. They all thought people would change jobs and these jobs would offer a good living to blue collar workers.
Surprise! It doesn’t work that way. Sure your ivy leaguers got nice cushy advisory jobs and consultancy jobs and got to talk about their adventures diring their two year China stint.
All the whole mill workers, garment workers, furniture workers, tools workers were forgotten and left behind.
Now, while inelegantly, someone is finally recognizing the grievance. It’s about time. It’s a shame it’s taken 20 years.
Let's not forget to blame the real culprit here, "Maximizing shareholder value." Afaik, without this constant need to cut a buck - everywhere, china would have nothing to steal because no one would go there in the first place.
> They had all forgotten about blue collar America. They all thought people would change jobs and these jobs would offer a good living to blue collar workers.
But.. people did change jobs? Unemployment is at an all-time low and goods and services are very cheap. Housing is not cheap, but that's a function of the wage rate (which could be argued is a function of housing costs).
Just because there are more services industry jobs and less manufacturing does not mean that 'blue collar America' is forgotten -- it's just changed identities.
Everyone benefits from global trade because the terms of trade should always benefit both parties.
Yes unemployment is low, but much of that is because many people have given up on finding jobs. U6 is something like 90 million.
Also, most service sector jobs don’t afford you a mortgage and other lower middle class living. Most service sector workers struggle to get by, compared to your blue collar worker of yesteryear. Those people could afford a mortgage, raise three kids and send the off to state school. That ain’t happening no more.
I don't think unemployment is at an all time low. The media says this and the government reports say this, but the methodology for calculating this is subjective.
"Yet to leave this group out significantly underestimates employment issues in the US. For example, the unemployment rate completely ignores the nearly 600,000 “discouraged workers” who say they are no longer looking because they don’t think they can find a job. It disregards the many students who would like a part-time job but have given up looking, and caretakers who would take a job if the compensation was high enough."
> Unemployment is at an all-time low and goods and services are very cheap.
Unemployment is low, precarity is high. Wall Street bitches about the primacy of stability and predictability all the time, but doesn't apply the same principle to working- and middle-class families' employment.
In percentage terms in the US, several big-ticket items in a working or middle-class family's budget are not cheap at all. You named housing, but it really is real property (the dirt), which makes this an even worse problem than expensive buildings. There are any number of alternative structure designs that can work around expensive buildings, and many DIY'able as well. You can't get around expensive-ass dirt, no matter how much "up by your own bootstraps", creative, or determined you get, and dirt even in "flyover country" is expensive for these kinds of budgets, especially so considering the kinds of wages they can get in those areas of the country.
Healthcare isn't cheap. Education isn't cheap. Insurance isn't cheap. Internet isn't cheap. Leisure time isn't cheap.
In young Millenial, working- or middle-class families, these budget categories combined tally into the 70%+ range of take-home, after-tax income. Sure, computers are hedonically cheap. Packaged, sub-standard nutrition food is cheap. Externality-reliant-business-models spewing forth piles of throwaway junk appliances, one-time-use-plastic, etc. are cheap.
Not all categories are weighted the same in quality of life, don't fall for the economic canard that just because a number of categories are dirt cheap (and many of them are externality- or outright subsidy-dependent to make them cheap), that those people standing closer to the left-hand side of the bell curve are getting a fair shake. They aren't, they haven't for the past 40 years, and just because they can't figure out the relationship between interest rates and bonds, or use Lexis-Nexis, or read an actuarial table, or navigate a bureaucracy, or extrapolate the possible implications of policy decisions decades into the future, or write a loop, doesn't mean it's open season on their human dignity or they're "muppets".
> All the whole milk workers, garment workers, furniture workers were forgotten and left behind.
This is valid point but there is a catch.
Economic growth and progress happens when countries are developing and moving up in the value chain. Developed economies are constantly moving towards high-tech and less labor incentive work. China is still industrial economy. US has moved into postindustrial economy. US manufacturing will decline despite trade wars. Manufacturing work will decline even more than GDP share of manufacturing.
When low productivity work (milk, garment, furniture workers) moves to China it allows redirecting investments and resources to higher value added products.
If these low productivity workers would be zombie/robots, companies would just write them off and recycle them into trash and compost - or sell them to China. But they are citizens and they vote. In other words, we have a political problem.
Possible solutions:
* Use tariffs to protect workers in low productivity work. This moves economic resources in the US to less competitive industries. Over decades, US falls behind other developed countries because it wants to protect industries that developing countries have.
* Solve the actual political problem directly. US citizens not earning living wages with skills they have.
The people who brought us Google we not the laid off workers nor community college blue collar kids who now don’t have decently earning blue collar jobs.
Manufacturing output has grown the past many years in the USA - higher productivity technology with fewer workers. It's untrue that manufacturing as an industry is in decline, it's just that the low end has while higher end has risen as have the required skills
Some people say that that was an artifact of quality adjustments on computer hardware, and that without the adjustments (or computer hardware) we're actually in a decline. [0] The chart of "Manufacturing" vs "Manufacturing, less computers [1] was pretty striking.
If you sold 1GB of RAM for $10 two years ago, and you sold 2GB of RAM for $10 this year, that's the normal state of the computer market. I don't think it's really equivalent to selling twice as many tons of steel or wheat for half the price.
If he's 'recognising the grievance', why does he spend so much time talking about immigrants and foreigners? He's a con artist swindling disadvantaged, desperate people by telling them that their problems are all the fault of other people in their class (immigrant workers, etc), rather than people like him.
He actually doesn’t talk bad about legal immigrants, he acknowledges the need and their contributions to the economy. He does badmouth _illegal_ immigrants, true. But we are one of the easiest countries to get in legally, compared to Mexico, Brazil, Canada, Australia, etc.
Moreover, he’s the president of the American people, not the President Of The World. He and every president has a sacred responsibility to look after his/her citizens.
It really doesn't matter though, as the point is that he is putting the blame on others (immigrants, other countries and their trade practices, etc.). Whether the immigrants are "illegal" or not doesn't matter in this context: it's an out group that grievances can be directed towards.
I'd be remiss if I didn't leave this here:
“Allowing the immigration to take place in Europe is a shame,” Trump said. “I think it changed the fabric of Europe and, unless you act very quickly, it’s never going to be what it was and I don’t mean that in a positive way.
“So I think allowing millions and millions of people to come into Europe is very, very sad,” he continued. “I think you are losing your culture. Look around. You go through certain areas that didn’t exist ten or 15 years ago.”
Until it became a cause celebre for progressives, Feinstein, Obama, Clinton, gov Brown, all spoke against illegal immigration. It’s not anathema to the Dems, but suddenly it’s something some think will get them votes, but they are risking alienating inner city whites and inner city blacks as well as rural white poors.
Few people would argue against legal immigration ala Canada, Australia, even Brazil or Mexico. They all have pretty reasonable requirements to becoming a legal resident.
I hear this all the time when it comes to rebutting criticism of Trump. It's interesting how such a terrible president who made such awful deals has so much in common with Trump...
Until it became a cause celebre for progressives, Feinstein, Obama, Clinton, gov Brown, all spoke against illegal immigration.
Could you please point to any of them speaking positively about illegal immigration, vs. speaking against Trump’s racism and practices such as separating young children from their parents at the border?
You said that illegal immigration is a cause celebre of the left. I asked for a demonstration that the left had spoken positively about illegal immigration. All of the links you provided were of people speaking negatively about illegal immigration.
So how can illegal immigration be both a cause celebre of the left, and something that the left condemns?
Before all of that you had Reagan Democrats, who were complicit in the decline of worker's power and rights while supporting economic and trade policies that undermined blue collar jobs.
They were never "forgotten and left behind", they signaled to the elites that they were happy to vote against their economic interests for whatever the culture war issue of the day is.
Unfortunately despite being a very nice guy, Carter was not a fighter. He just took it on the chin. People wanted someone who did something. Bringing inflation down from 20% or thereabouts and bringing price stability to fuel was important. So enter Reagan. But ultimately the demise began at the hands of GHWB and Clinton who took globalization full throttle.
Sure, if you ignore the data around wage stagnation, income inequality, accumulated wealth, etc.
When you actually look at the data it tracks with another development, one often ignored (as you yourself did here): the decline of union participation and activism.
I distinctly remember a debate that occurred for a time under GWB around "values voters", with "the left" (broadly and generally speaking) asking why Americans voted against their economic interests in favor of "moral values" and "the right" (again broadly and generally speaking) arguing that for some "moral values" hold more weight than economic interests.
I mention this because there is a deliberate attempt to remove responsibility of blue collar workers from their plight. All those guys you mentioned? Yea, they were elected. GHWB on the strength of being Reagan's VP, Clinton was re-elected after NAFTA and his VP Gore won the popular vote, GWB won in 2004 on the strength of "values voters", etc.
I think it's worthwhile for people to go back and read this 1996 news article from the time when we were opening up China and see who led the charge and why.
>The power of the new China lobby was evident in Beijing last March 7, when more than 100 representatives of major U.S. firms held their annual conference under the auspices of the U.S.-China Business Council. Delivering his first major speech since taking office just weeks before, U.S. Ambassador James Sasser told them that the Clinton administration was counting on aggressive pressure from business to secure renewal of MFN status for China.
>Of course, the Fortune 500 companies that comprise the U.S.-China Business Council—led by Boeing, Motorola, Caterpillar, AT&T, and the American International Group (AIG)—hardly needed Sasser's encouragement...
>Industry's real interest in China is its direct investment there (more than $25 billion), and its revenue from exporting such Chinese-made goods as electrical machinery, clothing, textiles, shoes, and toys back to the states. These exports are highly profitable for the companies, but they undercut labor's bargaining hand—and frequently take away jobs—in the United States, even as they provide a cheap source of goods.
> Of course China is playing unfairly. Not many people disagree.
There's no way of knowing for sure, but based purely on what I see on TV and read in forums, I'd say 50%++ of people seem to disagree, and some of them extremely vehemently. And in my experience, you don't have to go too far to find similarly thinking people on HN either.
This whole situation is incredibly frustrating to me because so many people seem to have such incredibly strong beliefs and certainty, yet only know, let alone understand, a tiny portion of the facts.....while accusing the other side of this very same thing, for an extra serving of delicious irony.
> The argument has been that the West should fight China as a unified bloc as opposed to the unilateral tariffs being imposed. It makes no sense to alienate Canada, the EU, Japan, and South Korea when confronting China. All of those countries (and the EU) have serious grievances and would have provided the US additional leverage.
That is "an" argument, that I've heard in very few places. Much more common is the stance that Trump is completely and unequivocally wrong on China practices and tariffs, full stop.
> The current approach is rooted in showmanship rather than strategy. It’s meant to provide a spectacle.
Facts and logic seem completely impotent, so it seems to me like a reasonable approach. Why he doesn't accompany it with some evidence like this article is a mystery and suggests that he in fact doesn't understand these things at a very deep level, but simultaneously I find that hard to believe. I wonder if we'll ever find out what's really going on in his head.
Wow, how refreshing. An objective relation on the trade tensions between the US and China. I am very disappointed by NPRs marketplace -- their correspondence is essentially like listening to teenage gossip reveling in using the term 'trade war' instead of treating the topic with the respect that it deserves.
this one offers no real data behind the so-called weighted tariff. US and China clearly import different products from each other, different categories of product might have different tariff on each side. Also when China joined WTO they may be agreed to impose some kind of "extra" tariff because it is viewed as developing country
I'm not a trade expert, but I can spot one clear omission missing from the trade deficit discussion: the value-added.
Chinese exports to the US have significantly lower value-added than the US exports to China. US exports have high value added, over 80% for exports to China. Chinese exports to US have much lower value added, something like 30-40%. Role of third countries in bilateral trading relationships is important.
Extreme case is Chinese made iPhone that leaves very little value-added to China, they just join expensive parts from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and US together with robots or cheap labor.
China exports more to the US, but less of the value stays in China. If you calculate the trade balance using value added trade US-China trade deficit is $200 billion for combined goods and services.
>0.7 percent of U.S. GDP depends on Chinese consumption of American-made goods and services, while 3.1 percent of China’s GDP is derived from U.S. demand. So, in any tariff battle, China would likely suffer more.
Both countries get hurt, but both countries will survive trade war agaisnt each other. But US is not in trade war path only with China. They go against EU, Canada, Mexico and others. Every front trade war would be worse but survivable. The real question is why. Everyone survives trade war but everybody also loses.
> And simple trade models, while they do say that trade wars are bad, don’t say that they’re catastrophic.
>To do this right, we should use one of those computable general equilibrium models I mentioned above. These suggest substantial but not huge losses – 2 or 3 percent of GDP.
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 151 ms ] threadIt's a war of attrition, and we're both gonna lose but china has a lot more to lose than we do atm.
On the other hand, picking trade fights with close allies & major partners like Canada and the EU is absurd.
It is literally the same concept as attempting to get as many offers when you sell a house so you can sell to the highest bidder.
There’s nothing wrong with negotiating with friends, but when you go out of your way to constantly piss them off and threaten them, you’re not going to have any friends for long.
No. I didn’t say that. Nobody said that. What?
Well, I'd argue that if you're seeking "fair value" and are 1) not unreasonable, 2) your friend is not unreasonable, and 3) there is more or less a market price or consensus about the value of an object, there is little no risk of destroying the friendship -- reasonable people can seek fair value and market transactions can support claims about value. If 1, 2, or 3 aren't in place then your friendship is on shaky ground already (someone is unreasonable) or the market for an object is just hard to price (and more information is required for reasonable people to come to a consensus.)
[citation needed]
according to this (based on CIA factbook 2017) commodities as <15%
http://www.worldstopexports.com/united-states-top-10-exports...
(unless your measure stick is tonnage and not the value)
The Chinese market is huge - many executive types seemingly fall victim to hubris quite often - and this is no exception. That's the most charitable explanation possible.
The less charitable and more realistic way this happened in my opinion? No executive cares about 10-15 years from now. At most they are looking a couple years down the road for bonuses.
Make no mistake the Chinese government is actively trying to steal IP, but most of the IP it has was knowingly shared by Western companies desperate to lower costs and get access to the Chinese market.
The whole issue of 'fair trade' is rather complex, as all actors attempt to skew the playing field to their benefit, as invisibly as possible. China appears to be quite good at the game.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/this-subsidy-for-china-is-dumb-...
The argument has been that the West should fight China as a unified bloc as opposed to the unilateral tariffs being imposed. It makes no sense to alienate Canada, the EU, Japan, and South Korea when confronting China. All of those countries (and the EU) have serious grievances and would have provided the US additional leverage.
The current approach is rooted in showmanship rather than strategy. It’s meant to provide a spectacle.
Looks like the US is the largest trading partner with China, how much leverage do you need? How long would it take a "unified bloc" to agree on doing anything?
This is why most of the time the US does things unilaterally. Whether its militarily, economically or otherwise. We ask other countries if they want to stop China from laying huge tariffs on their products and they say, "Yes, for sure!" Then we say, "Okay, let's all impose tariffs on their imports and fight back!" and suddenly all those countries who were on board to do something suddenly get cold feet and don't want to get sucked into a trade war or deal with the short term consequences of standing up to them.
Also, these trade wars with China have been off and on since the 1970's if not earlier.
You're obviously confusing between the trade wars with Japan and the trade wars with China.
Seems like this is asking for a citation. That kind of rhetoric works for all purposes (surely EU trade negotiators have been similarly annoyed by US inaction on other issues, for example). If you have something specific to complain about, this is the place to do it.
Further, the US keeps one foot out of international tools like the WTO or the UN law of the sea, neutering the very mechanisms with which the rest of the world could coordinate action.
EU is China's biggest trading partner and China is now the EU's second-biggest trading partner behind the United States
Europe's total trade is 696.3 billion (with 403.2 billion exported); however, subtracting out JUST the UK's 78.5 billion brings this down to 617.8 billion and 343.6 exported. Remove Russia and you're at 549.8 and 308.8 exported.
The US is 557 billion total with 409.2 exported. The US is China's biggest trading partner.
Let's not even get started on the fact that the US is the major buyer of Chinese goods - nobody buys more. The US imports more dollars worth of goods than any other region except Asia.
Trump repeatedly said during his campaign he would go after China for their tariffs and how they manipulate their currency. For a lot of Trump voters, he's just following through with a campaign promise.
1.) S&P 500 up 5.3%, shanghai composite down 15.7% http://www.talkmarkets.com/content/us-markets/china-and-us-d...
2.) Yuan falls 1 year low vs dollar, losing 7% since 1st quarter https://www.reuters.com/article/china-stocks-hongkong-close/...
3.) China has 33.3 billion yuan ($4.9 billion) in corporate bond defaults so far this year, already exceeds the full-year record of 30 billion yuan, set in 2016. https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-07-19/why-china...
4.) Chinese manufacturing slowed in June as exports weakened http://www.startribune.com/surveys-show-chinese-manufacturin...
also, it does look like each country/block is setting its own tariffs against China
The European Union will impose import tariff quotas of 25% on a number of steel products https://www.marketwatch.com/story/eu-to-impose-tariff-quotas...
The Canadian measures are expected to include new quotas on certain steel imports to prevent dumping, with tariffs applied above that threshold https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-06-26/canada-sa...
Your argument (I think) is that we're successfully limiting Chinese trade effectivenes, and your argument is that their currency is dropping? You understand how these things work, right?
Sure, we've limited import of some small selection of items. And in exchange, everything else from China gets cheaper.
> Chinese manufacturing slowed in June
This seemed like such a whopper I actually followed the link. Chinese manufacturing growth slowed in June. That you conflate a derivative with the function tells me all I need to know about your seriousness.
They all thought they knew better and could bring China in line.
After Clinton, GWB didn’t even try. He was too distracted by bin Laden. Obama was trying to make nice to the rest of the world during his first term, then got embroiled with the unrest he started in the ME. They had all forgotten about blue collar America. They all thought people would change jobs and these jobs would offer a good living to blue collar workers.
Surprise! It doesn’t work that way. Sure your ivy leaguers got nice cushy advisory jobs and consultancy jobs and got to talk about their adventures diring their two year China stint.
All the whole mill workers, garment workers, furniture workers, tools workers were forgotten and left behind.
Now, while inelegantly, someone is finally recognizing the grievance. It’s about time. It’s a shame it’s taken 20 years.
http://www.europeanfinancialreview.com/?p=883
But.. people did change jobs? Unemployment is at an all-time low and goods and services are very cheap. Housing is not cheap, but that's a function of the wage rate (which could be argued is a function of housing costs).
Just because there are more services industry jobs and less manufacturing does not mean that 'blue collar America' is forgotten -- it's just changed identities.
Everyone benefits from global trade because the terms of trade should always benefit both parties.
Also, most service sector jobs don’t afford you a mortgage and other lower middle class living. Most service sector workers struggle to get by, compared to your blue collar worker of yesteryear. Those people could afford a mortgage, raise three kids and send the off to state school. That ain’t happening no more.
But it is completely false as this graph shows: https://www.bls.gov/opub/ted/2018/u-3-unemployment-rate-was-... Empirical data suggests that U6 is almost linearly dependent on U3, meaning that, indeed, the "real" unemployment in the US is record low.
Yes, service jobs doesn't pay well. That is perhaps related to decades of union busting and resistance against raising minimum wages?
These statistics suggest that unemployment is at 25%: http://www.shadowstats.com/alternate_data/unemployment-chart...
This article explains some concerns about the manner in which the rate is calculated: https://qz.com/877432/the-us-unemployment-rate-measure-is-de...
"Yet to leave this group out significantly underestimates employment issues in the US. For example, the unemployment rate completely ignores the nearly 600,000 “discouraged workers” who say they are no longer looking because they don’t think they can find a job. It disregards the many students who would like a part-time job but have given up looking, and caretakers who would take a job if the compensation was high enough."
Unemployment is low, precarity is high. Wall Street bitches about the primacy of stability and predictability all the time, but doesn't apply the same principle to working- and middle-class families' employment.
In percentage terms in the US, several big-ticket items in a working or middle-class family's budget are not cheap at all. You named housing, but it really is real property (the dirt), which makes this an even worse problem than expensive buildings. There are any number of alternative structure designs that can work around expensive buildings, and many DIY'able as well. You can't get around expensive-ass dirt, no matter how much "up by your own bootstraps", creative, or determined you get, and dirt even in "flyover country" is expensive for these kinds of budgets, especially so considering the kinds of wages they can get in those areas of the country.
Healthcare isn't cheap. Education isn't cheap. Insurance isn't cheap. Internet isn't cheap. Leisure time isn't cheap.
In young Millenial, working- or middle-class families, these budget categories combined tally into the 70%+ range of take-home, after-tax income. Sure, computers are hedonically cheap. Packaged, sub-standard nutrition food is cheap. Externality-reliant-business-models spewing forth piles of throwaway junk appliances, one-time-use-plastic, etc. are cheap.
Not all categories are weighted the same in quality of life, don't fall for the economic canard that just because a number of categories are dirt cheap (and many of them are externality- or outright subsidy-dependent to make them cheap), that those people standing closer to the left-hand side of the bell curve are getting a fair shake. They aren't, they haven't for the past 40 years, and just because they can't figure out the relationship between interest rates and bonds, or use Lexis-Nexis, or read an actuarial table, or navigate a bureaucracy, or extrapolate the possible implications of policy decisions decades into the future, or write a loop, doesn't mean it's open season on their human dignity or they're "muppets".
This is valid point but there is a catch.
Economic growth and progress happens when countries are developing and moving up in the value chain. Developed economies are constantly moving towards high-tech and less labor incentive work. China is still industrial economy. US has moved into postindustrial economy. US manufacturing will decline despite trade wars. Manufacturing work will decline even more than GDP share of manufacturing.
When low productivity work (milk, garment, furniture workers) moves to China it allows redirecting investments and resources to higher value added products.
If these low productivity workers would be zombie/robots, companies would just write them off and recycle them into trash and compost - or sell them to China. But they are citizens and they vote. In other words, we have a political problem.
Possible solutions:
* Use tariffs to protect workers in low productivity work. This moves economic resources in the US to less competitive industries. Over decades, US falls behind other developed countries because it wants to protect industries that developing countries have.
* Solve the actual political problem directly. US citizens not earning living wages with skills they have.
When people start to flood from rich countries to poor countries to improve their quality of life, abstraction has served it's purpose.
The difference between MRI machine and metal press is very concrete.
Is this really true?
Does having industries like furniture-making really make it so we don't have Google?
A large portion of a goods value, especially for consumer goods, is perceived value.
If you sold 1GB of RAM for $10 two years ago, and you sold 2GB of RAM for $10 this year, that's the normal state of the computer market. I don't think it's really equivalent to selling twice as many tons of steel or wheat for half the price.
0: https://qz.com/1269172/the-epic-mistake-about-manufacturing-... 1: https://www.theatlas.com/charts/BJh4B5_TG
Moreover, he’s the president of the American people, not the President Of The World. He and every president has a sacred responsibility to look after his/her citizens.
"He does badmouth _illegal_ immigrants, true"
So which is it?
It really doesn't matter though, as the point is that he is putting the blame on others (immigrants, other countries and their trade practices, etc.). Whether the immigrants are "illegal" or not doesn't matter in this context: it's an out group that grievances can be directed towards.
I'd be remiss if I didn't leave this here:
“Allowing the immigration to take place in Europe is a shame,” Trump said. “I think it changed the fabric of Europe and, unless you act very quickly, it’s never going to be what it was and I don’t mean that in a positive way.
“So I think allowing millions and millions of people to come into Europe is very, very sad,” he continued. “I think you are losing your culture. Look around. You go through certain areas that didn’t exist ten or 15 years ago.”
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/politics/wp/2018/07/13/t...
Few people would argue against legal immigration ala Canada, Australia, even Brazil or Mexico. They all have pretty reasonable requirements to becoming a legal resident.
I hear this all the time when it comes to rebutting criticism of Trump. It's interesting how such a terrible president who made such awful deals has so much in common with Trump...
Could you please point to any of them speaking positively about illegal immigration, vs. speaking against Trump’s racism and practices such as separating young children from their parents at the border?
Jerry Brown trying to block legal Vietnamese immigrants in 75 : https://www.wsj.com/articles/when-jerry-brown-tried-to-keep-...
Feinstein: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lvRZdNoHEf8
Obama as well, but this is enough to prove the point.
So how can illegal immigration be both a cause celebre of the left, and something that the left condemns?
Have we misunderstood each other?
They were never "forgotten and left behind", they signaled to the elites that they were happy to vote against their economic interests for whatever the culture war issue of the day is.
When you actually look at the data it tracks with another development, one often ignored (as you yourself did here): the decline of union participation and activism.
I distinctly remember a debate that occurred for a time under GWB around "values voters", with "the left" (broadly and generally speaking) asking why Americans voted against their economic interests in favor of "moral values" and "the right" (again broadly and generally speaking) arguing that for some "moral values" hold more weight than economic interests.
I mention this because there is a deliberate attempt to remove responsibility of blue collar workers from their plight. All those guys you mentioned? Yea, they were elected. GHWB on the strength of being Reagan's VP, Clinton was re-elected after NAFTA and his VP Gore won the popular vote, GWB won in 2004 on the strength of "values voters", etc.
>The power of the new China lobby was evident in Beijing last March 7, when more than 100 representatives of major U.S. firms held their annual conference under the auspices of the U.S.-China Business Council. Delivering his first major speech since taking office just weeks before, U.S. Ambassador James Sasser told them that the Clinton administration was counting on aggressive pressure from business to secure renewal of MFN status for China.
>Of course, the Fortune 500 companies that comprise the U.S.-China Business Council—led by Boeing, Motorola, Caterpillar, AT&T, and the American International Group (AIG)—hardly needed Sasser's encouragement...
>Industry's real interest in China is its direct investment there (more than $25 billion), and its revenue from exporting such Chinese-made goods as electrical machinery, clothing, textiles, shoes, and toys back to the states. These exports are highly profitable for the companies, but they undercut labor's bargaining hand—and frequently take away jobs—in the United States, even as they provide a cheap source of goods.
http://prospect.org/article/new-china-lobby
I'm afraid that this has always been about rearranging our trade policy so that we enrich the few at the expense of the many inside our nation.
There's no way of knowing for sure, but based purely on what I see on TV and read in forums, I'd say 50%++ of people seem to disagree, and some of them extremely vehemently. And in my experience, you don't have to go too far to find similarly thinking people on HN either.
This whole situation is incredibly frustrating to me because so many people seem to have such incredibly strong beliefs and certainty, yet only know, let alone understand, a tiny portion of the facts.....while accusing the other side of this very same thing, for an extra serving of delicious irony.
> The argument has been that the West should fight China as a unified bloc as opposed to the unilateral tariffs being imposed. It makes no sense to alienate Canada, the EU, Japan, and South Korea when confronting China. All of those countries (and the EU) have serious grievances and would have provided the US additional leverage.
That is "an" argument, that I've heard in very few places. Much more common is the stance that Trump is completely and unequivocally wrong on China practices and tariffs, full stop.
> The current approach is rooted in showmanship rather than strategy. It’s meant to provide a spectacle.
Facts and logic seem completely impotent, so it seems to me like a reasonable approach. Why he doesn't accompany it with some evidence like this article is a mystery and suggests that he in fact doesn't understand these things at a very deep level, but simultaneously I find that hard to believe. I wonder if we'll ever find out what's really going on in his head.
Chinese exports to the US have significantly lower value-added than the US exports to China. US exports have high value added, over 80% for exports to China. Chinese exports to US have much lower value added, something like 30-40%. Role of third countries in bilateral trading relationships is important.
Extreme case is Chinese made iPhone that leaves very little value-added to China, they just join expensive parts from Taiwan, Japan, South Korea and US together with robots or cheap labor.
China exports more to the US, but less of the value stays in China. If you calculate the trade balance using value added trade US-China trade deficit is $200 billion for combined goods and services.
>0.7 percent of U.S. GDP depends on Chinese consumption of American-made goods and services, while 3.1 percent of China’s GDP is derived from U.S. demand. So, in any tariff battle, China would likely suffer more.
https://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2018-07-19/china-s-e...
Both countries get hurt, but both countries will survive trade war agaisnt each other. But US is not in trade war path only with China. They go against EU, Canada, Mexico and others. Every front trade war would be worse but survivable. The real question is why. Everyone survives trade war but everybody also loses.
> And simple trade models, while they do say that trade wars are bad, don’t say that they’re catastrophic.
>To do this right, we should use one of those computable general equilibrium models I mentioned above. These suggest substantial but not huge losses – 2 or 3 percent of GDP.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/06/17/opinion/thinking-about-a-...