Trade gap doesn’t make the US a global wimp
Associated Press
WASHINGTON
Is the United States the 98-pound weakling of global trade?
President Donald Trump and his economic advisers think so. They point to 41-straight years of U.S. trade deficits as evidence that America has been out-competed, out-negotiated and flat out cheated by trading partners such as China, Mexico and Germany – countries that consistently sell more to the United States than they buy.
Friday, the Commerce Department reported that the United States once again registered a trade deficit – $43.6 billion in June. So far this year, the trade gap is $276.6 billion, up nearly 11 per cent from January-June 2016.
Trump and his team view trade deficits as an economic evil that strangles growth and kills American jobs. They’ve promised to bring the deficits down – by imposing tariffs and other barriers to imports if they have to.
Many economists don’t see things quite that way. They reject the idea that trade is a zero-sum game in which the prize goes to countries that export more than they import. They argue that Americans benefit from the wider choices and lower prices that imports offer.
“I don’t see it as a question of economic weakness,” says Dean Baker, co-founder of the Center for Economic and Policy Research think-tank. “You could say consumers gain. We get cheaper prices. Importers gain.”
But there are losers, too, when cheap imports enter the country, Baker says, especially among factory workers facing foreign competition. “In the Midwest, Ohio, Pennsylvania, we lost millions of jobs,” he says.