There are many other issues in play, including:
1. Currency manipulation, i.e. pegging one’s currency (such as the Chinese RMB) to the US dollar to maintain a predictable cost advantage.
2. Technology, as automation reduces the inputs of human labor per output even in nations with few trade treaties.
3. Global wage arbitrage, as domestic corporations move production overseas to lower labor costs (exacerbated by insanely high costs of healthcare insurance for employees in the U.S.)
4. High tax rates on domestic corporations (35%) push companies overseas to lower tax nations.
5. Trade is grossly miscalculated by current metrics; if we calculate the value that actually flows to each nation that makes parts and software for the iPhone, we find that “Analysts estimate that as little as $10 of the value of every iPhone or iPad actually ends up in the Chinese economy, in the form of income paid directly to Foxconn or other contractors.” Meanwhile, twenty times that sum flows directly to Apple HQ in Cupertino, California for software and profit.
Forget “Free Trade”–Focus on Capital Flows (October 28, 2014)
“In a world dominated by mobile capital, mobile capital is the comparative advantage.”
6. Triffin’s paradox demands that any nation issuing the global reserve currency must run a trade deficit as a means of exporting the reserve currency into the global economy. I know this is counter-intuitive, but I’ve explained it many times over the years:
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In other words, if you want the Exorbitant Privilege of issuing the global reserve currency, you have to run a permanent trade deficit.
Let’s look at what any president can influence/control and what is beyond their reach. Presidents can complain about currency manipulation and even threaten reprisals, but currency manipulation is not only a trade issue; it overlaps with diplomatic issues that extend far beyond trade. For example, the U.S. might tolerate some currency pegs to support key allies.
Any president’s ability to limit automation, technology and “software eating the world” is essentially zero. Nations that attempt to limit or stifle technological advances end up stifling productivity and innovation, and as a result they are doomed to stagnation.
The same can be said of global wage arbitrage. There is very little any president can do to stop companies from taking advantage of the divergence of wages between states, nations and regions.
As for destroying the reserve currency (the U.S. dollar) in a quixotic quest for trade surpluses:Â look at Japan, which has consistently run trade surpluses while wallowing in decades of social and economic stagnation.
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“The truth is more complicated. Although imports have put some people out of work, trade is far from the most important factor behind the loss of manufacturing jobs. The main culprit is technology. AutoÂmation and other technologies have enabled vast productivity and efficiency improvements, but they have also made many blue-collar jobs obsolete. One representative study, by the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University, found that proÂductivity growth accounted for more than 85 percent of the job loss in manufacturing between 2000 and 2010, a period when employment in that sector fell by 5.6 million. Just 13 percent of the overall job loss resulted from trade.”Join me in offering solutions by becoming a $1/month patron of my work via patreon.com.
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