Give President Trump credit.
When he chastised NATO allies over their failure to spend
adequately on our common defense, his critics said he was endangering the
Atlantic alliance. Instead, his tough stance persuaded allies to spend billions
more on defense, strengthening NATO instead.
Now, Trump is doing the same on trade. At the Group of Seven
summit in Quebec, Trump was roundly criticized for publicly berating allies
over their trade practices and provoking a needless trade war. Well, once
again, it appears Trump is being proved right.
On Wednesday, he and European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker announced a cease-fire in their trade war and promised to seek the
complete elimination of most trade barriers between the United States and the
European Union. "We agreed today ... to work together toward zero tariffs,
zero non-tariff barriers, and zero subsidies on non-auto industrial
goods," declared the two leaders in a joint statement.
Zero tariffs. Wednesday's breakthrough with the European Union
shows that, contrary to what his critics allege, Trump is not a protectionist;
rather, he is using tariffs as a tool to advance a radical free-trade agenda.
In a little-noticed interview with Fox News's Maria Bartiromo
earlier this month, Trump revealed that during the G-7 summit he made a
sweeping proposal. "I said, 'I have an idea, everybody. I'll guarantee you
we'll do it immediately. Nobody pay any more tax, everybody take down your
barriers. No barriers, no tax. Everybody, are you all set?' ... You know what
happened? Everybody said, 'Uh, can we get onto another subject?'"
Trump offered to eliminate all trade barriers -- and his
supposedly pro-free-trade allies passed. Right before his meeting with Juncker
this week, he repeated the offer, tweeting, "The European Union is coming
to Washington tomorrow to negotiate a deal on Trade. I have an idea for them.
Both the U.S. and the E.U. drop all Tariffs, Barriers
and Subsidies!" Trump knows that most of our trading partners
don't really want free trade; they want managed trade, where they can get
access to U.S. markets while protecting certain industries from U.S.
competition. Trump's strategy to get them to drop these protectionist barriers
is to impose crushing tariffs.
At a rally earlier this week, Trump explained his strategy for getting
to zero tariffs. "You know, other countries have tariffs on us. So, when I
say, 'Well, I'm going to put tariffs on them,' they all start screaming, 'He's
using tariffs,'" Trump said. "I said [to the European Union], 'You
have to change.' They didn't want to change. I said, 'Okay. Good. We're going
to tariff your cars.' ... They said, 'When can we show up? When can we be
there?' [Laughter.] 'Would tomorrow be okay?' Oh, folks, stick with us. Stick
with us."
Now Trump's hard-line trade strategy is being vindicated. Not only
is the E.U. negotiating zero tariffs, but also it agreed to immediately buy
more American soybeans -- which helps Trump in his trade battle with China.
After Trump imposed tariffs on $34 billion worth of Chinese goods, China
responded with retaliatory tariffs on U.S. products, including soybeans.
Beijing knows that China is the single largest importer of U.S.
soybeans, and that about 96 percent of U.S. soybeans are grown in 18 states --
all but two of which voted for Trump in 2016. Their tariffs left soybean
farmers none too happy with Trump and gave a political boost to vulnerable
Senate Democrats in soy-producing farm states such as Heidi Heitkamp, N.D., Joe
Donnelly, Ind., and Claire McCaskill, Mo.
Now, Trump has enlisted the European Union to help U.S. soybean
farmers to counteract the repercussions of Chinese tariffs, in addition to the
$12 billion in aid he has promised for U.S. farmers. That's three-dimensional
trade chess.
Earlier this week, Trump tweeted, "Tariffs are the greatest!
Either a country which has treated the United States unfairly on Trade
negotiates a fair deal, or it gets hit with Tariffs. It's as simple as
that." Well, maybe it is and maybe it isn't.
Trump is a long way from a final deal. And in trade, nothing is
agreed to until everything is agreed to. But this is a surprisingly positive
first step.
If Trump succeeds in using trade wars to bring down European and
Chinese trade barriers, he may end up being one of the greatest free-trade
presidents in history.