International Man:
Trump’s America First economic policy seemed to help him win the 2016 election.
He promised to renegotiate America’s trade deals and bring jobs back to the
United States.
As
president, Trump has used tariffs and other protectionist measures to try to
reduce the trade deficit.
What
do you think of Trump’s trade policies and tariffs?
David Stockman: The
trade policies are idiotic. They haven’t improved the trade deficit. And have
caused other problems.
We got
the numbers in now for 2018 and we had the largest trade deficit in history!
The first point is that his
trade policies are not accomplishing anything. In fact, it’s thrown many
sectors under the bus. Manufacturers that import components from China are now
paying much higher prices because of the tariff charge.
Farmers
have gotten thrown under the bus in a major way. The whole agricultural export
system that was patiently developed over many, many years has essentially been
destroyed through retaliation.
Truth
be told, there isn’t that much elasticity of supply in farm products in the
short run. So, what’s happened is that South American soybeans are going to
China. You can see on the trade maps that the bulk carriers are all heading
from South America toward East Asia, and US soybeans are backfilling markets
that used to be supplied by South America.
It’s
one gigantic, pointless, stupid shuffle that has resulted from attempting to
impose huge tariffs on one country.
Now,
this is very different from the 1930s. Everybody likes to bring up a metaphor
or image of the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act. At least with Smoot-Hawley, it was
across the board globally. It affected everybody.
What
Trump has done is put an average of 19% tariff on $360 billion worth in goods,
which is nearly 2/3 of the $540 billion we import from China.
So,
what’s happening?
Stuff
is getting re-sourced and, frankly, re-badged to come from Vietnam, Malaysia,
Indonesia, or other barren islands in the Pacific that produce nothing.
In
some ways, it’s the craziest foreign aid program ever created. Trump doesn’t
know that.
Maybe
we’re finally doing some kind of restitution to the Vietnamese for destroying
their country in the 1960s. We’re shuffling a lot of business their way and
away from China, because Trump is trying to prove something to the movers in
Beijing.
Trump
often talks about the bad things going on in Mexico—saying that they need to
enforce the border and threatening them with tariffs.
Mexico
is going to be getting a lot of added value. The stuff that is produced in
China will be shifted to finish production, packaging, or assembly in Mexico so
that it doesn’t get hit with a Chinese tariff.
It’s
rampant stupidity. The financial media, they cover this every day with bated
breath about whether we’re going to get some kind of asinine phase one trade
deal, which we actually now have. Maybe!
This
is all without remarking on the chaos that’s being generated all over the world
as a result of this giant-tariff-on-one-country policy that Trump has come up
with on his own.
You don’t put a 19% tariff on $360 billion
in goods from China, which can, with some adjustment, be produced in lots of
other places around the world. It’s so obvious: A zero incremental tariff on
the rest of the world suppliers is creating one giant arbitrage and incentive
for re-sourcing production, relabeling stuff that now gets made in China and
finished, assembled, and packaged somewhere else.
But this
is where we are right now. How anybody thinks that any good could come out of
this, or that it has anything to do with “Make America Great Again,” is beyond
me.
Now,
the one thing I will say is that it’s tarnished the idea of America first.
America
First during the campaign applied to foreign policy and to our whole imperial
presence all over the world—militarily, with all of these occupations, bases,
and interventions.
At
least in that arena, the metaphor of America First had some real power to stop
being the policemen of the world and that the world can go on without American
military intervention from one end of the planet to the other.
President
Trump has tried to do that in little bits, but he’s constantly thwarted by the
Deep State and the bipartisan establishment—who seem to think the US is the
indispensable nation and that we need to be in every war, or the world is going
to fall apart. That is of course totally untrue.
Where
it counts with America First, Trump has made little progress, and where it
shouldn’t have been applied—in trade, global commerce, and economics—it has
made a disastrous mess.
International Man:
Trump’s America First policy during the 2016 election appealed to the Rust Belt
of the US and bringing jobs back. How have his trade policies impacted American industry and jobs?
David Stockman: I
think there’s been a lot of boasting about anecdotes. In other words, some
manufactures trying to curry favor with Washington put out a press release
saying they’re bringing back 35 jobs. Maybe they are; maybe they aren’t.
Dell
did it the other day, about manufacturing something in Texas that they were
making there anyway. They had planned to move production of their high-end
desktop abroad somewhere and they decided not to move it.
To
get an idea of what’s really going on, it’s better to look at the data,
specifically work hours. In manufacturing, they cut back overtime hours and
even cut back scheduled hours, and now you begin to see the headcount changing.
So, I
look at hours. In manufacturing, hours are down 1.2% in the last year.
For
example, you had all this ballyhoo recently about the monthly jobs report. It
seemed there were a lot of manufacturing jobs, but they weren’t new jobs. They
were GM jobs that had temporarily disappeared due to a strike and had nothing
to do with sustainable trends. And Trump keeps beating the tom-toms about all
this alleged success.
No one points out that today, compared
to the peak prior to the crisis—in November 2007—hours in manufacturing are
down 13.5%. Compared to the peak prior to the dotcom bust in early 2000, it’s
down 28%.
My larger point is that hours are a far
better measure of output. If you want to talk about bringing jobs back, use the
hours measurement.
International Man: If
Trump was serious about making the US industry competitive, what could he do?
David Stockman: The best thing he could do is a
housecleaning of the Fed.
The Fed’s policies are the number-one
enemy of real sustainable growth, job creation, and the American economy.
First,
the 2% target inflation is absurd.
We’re in
a world where we’re competing with $5-an-hour labor in China and $15 or $18 in
South Korea. We should be deflating our economy, not inflating it, because when
we inflate a price level, wages go up with it, and we become just that much
more uncompetitive in global trade either as an exporter or in competition with
the imports coming in.
The
American worker isn’t any better off because he got an extra 2% in his wage.
He’s paying 2%—if not far more actually—at the grocery store, at the doctor’s
office, for education costs, and for transportation.
The first thing we need to do is get
rid of inflation targeting and try to become more competitive by allowing the
market to automatically do it. If the Fed wasn’t in the way, we would have high
interest rates and a deflating price system as the economy attempted to adjust
to the massive new competition in China.
The second thing is to get the Fed out
of the business of propping up the stock market in fear that if the stock
market is allowed to correct, we’ll have a short run of recession—which is
true.
Stock crashes lead to recession, owing to this crazy financial
engineering that has become the total preoccupation of the corporate C-suites
of America.
Companies
are spending all of their cash flow, using up their balance sheet, in order to
buy back stock and do ridiculous M&A deals that four years from now get
unwound because they didn’t work. Then they get praised for restructuring. It’s
just an endless cycle of stupidity.
If we got
the financial market back on its own two feet—back to a free market, honest
price discovery, and an end to this casino effect in the stock market—it would
be a powerful message to the C-suites of America.
The
message would be, “You’re not going to get yourself rich on stock options on
Wall Street. Make the company better, more competitive, and profitable by
investing on Main Street.” But that’s not what they’re doing right now.
We’ve
had this huge increase in business debt since the 2008 crisis. It was about $10
trillion then, and its over $15 trillion now. They’ve increased debt by 50%.
Yet real investment on Main Street after depreciation is no higher than it was
in 2007.
To summarize, if we started deflating,
rather than inflating our economy, if we get the C-suites back into the
business of running companies and investing for the long haul rather than
financial engineering on Wall Street, it would eventually and slowly heal our
competitive situation.
It would lead to more jobs, higher
incomes, more sustainable prosperity for the American economy.
But that requires a massive change at
the Fed—a housecleaning, of both the people and the models and policies that
they use.
Reprinted with permission
from International
Man.
Former
Congressman David A. Stockman was Reagan's OMB director, which he wrote about
in his best-selling book, The Triumph of Politics. His latest books
are The Great Deformation: The Corruption of Capitalism in
America and Peak Trump: The Undrainable Swamp And The Fantasy Of MAGA.
He's the editor and publisher of the new David Stockman's Contra Corner. He was
an original partner in the Blackstone Group, and reads LRC the first thing
every morning.
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© International
Man