“Tough Negotiations”The European press informs us that a delegation of EU Commission minions, including Mr. JC Juncker (who according to a euphemistically worded description by one of his critics at the Commission “seems often befuddled and tired, not really quite present”) and European Council president Donald Tusk, has made landfall in Beijing. Their mission was to berate prime minister Li Keqiang over alleged “steel dumping” by China and get him to cease and desist. The left-leaning Guardian writes – in a somewhat strident-sounding tone – that “Jean-Claude Juncker threatens China over steel dumping in Europe”.
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Steel rebar(emphasis added) We mention the strident tone mainly because steel workers are a kind of symbol/ hobby horse of the left – a nostalgic remnant, as the historic roots of socialism and unionism are often associated with smokestack industries. So they can’t help praising this apparently testosterone-laden version of Juncker, striding upon the international stage to fight for the rights of the steel worker! Yeah, baby! Time to play hardball with these yellow perils! Friendship, comrade! Readers may remember that one of the first actions of Mr. Hollande’s former crypto-communist industry minister Arnaud Mountebank was to try to force loss-making steel plants to keep operating (see “Curdled Sauce Hollandaise” for details on this, by scrolling down to the section entitled Micro-Managing Industry). |
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Impeccable LogicHarkening back to what we have written in connection with the idiocy of US steel tariffs, we would like remind everyone of the impeccable logic of the EC’s approach to this issue. Just imagine: there are now countless industries, which probably represent economic output a 100 times greater than that of the steel industry, which are getting steel cheaper. This means not only that profits, capital investment and employment at all these industries is likely to grow, it also means that consumers may get to buy their products cheaper. After all, it seems a very good bet that at least part of these savings will be passed on. Everybody will be richer! Well, we can’t have that. It’s like with those cheap solar panels, it is simply too great for everybody involved, potentially way too much fun. So it is only natural that Juncker and Tusk should do everything in their power to protect the steel industry from competition! As we said above, the logic is inescapable. Below we re-post a video in which the “obsolete industries” support group explains the problem to a few befuddled (Juncker-like befuddlement may be contagious) citizens in the streets of London. What triggered this were taxi industry lobbying efforts to get “Uber” banned, but the principle is of course exactly the same: Dedicated young people campaign in favor of obsolete industries, the plight of which is evidently not quite understood by selfish and greedy consumers – as their decision to constantly “vote with their wallet” clearly illustrates. |
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The Tradition of Cronyism Masquerading as “Reform”Why is there such an obsession with long-refuted mercantilist policies in Europe? Isn’t the EU supposed to be a pro free market organization? We partly have Jean-Baptiste Colbert to thank for it, the former comptroller-general of France, who introduced mercantilist policies in France in the 17th century. In the process he succeeded in slowing economic progress, restricting consumer choice and impoverishing the general population, while lining the pockets of favored cronies. Wikipedia lists a few of Colbert’s interventionist measures, which are misnamed “market reforms” in the entry. Not unlike the Nazis, Colbert apparently tried to create an island of economic autarky:
It sure sounds like the description of the prototypical French bureaucrat tasked with mucking up the economy (150 edicts to “regulate the guilds” is of course fairly harmless compared to the licensing mania of modern regulatory governments). We find the approving undertone of the Wikipedia entry reproduced above slightly off-putting actually. Statolatry is almost literally dripping from it. Further below we inter alia read that Colbert was “ruthless”, as he could not “respect individual interests” (favored cronies evidently excepted, considering the above list of “reforms”), and selectively defaulted on government debt so as to punish allegedly “fraudulent creditors” of the government – i.e., people foolish enough to lend the government money. His other main claim to fame? He “improved tax collection” and apparently raised taxes as well. Obviously, no mention is made anywhere of the real reasons for such interventions, which ultimately drive the actions of Juncker & Co. as well – namely cronyism in some shape or form (admittedly paired with economic illiteracy). Why else would such an effort be made to favor a small minority’s interests over those of the vast majority of consumers and productive users of a commodity? |
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If China Wants to be a “Market Economy”, the Government Must Intervene MoreLastly, it is actually quite ironic that China’s status as a “market economy” was used as the bludgeon in these bizarre negotiations. As the FT reports:
(emphasis added) So to summarize this: in order to be considered a “market economy”, the Chinese government is supposed to intervene in China’s steel market in order to trim excess capacity. Can it possibly get any more ridiculous? |
Conclusion
There is a lot of talk about “free trade” and the setback for the cause of free trade the “Brexit” allegedly represents. It should be obvious though that the arrangements negotiated between various governments by no means represent free trade. It would be much better to call them “managed trade” agreements.
In fact, none of this has much to do with free markets. All that is happening here is that the EU once is again showing its true – protectionist – colors.
Chart by: BarChart
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Tags: Jean-Claude Juncker,Li Keqiang,newslettersent,On Economy,On Politics