Trump Says Trade War Easy Maybe Not

The record shows that tariffs, while they may help certain domestic manufacturers, can come at a broad cost

Washington: In agitating for a trade war, President Donald Trump may have forgotten William Tecumseh Sherman’s adage that “war is hell.”

The Civil War general’s observation can be apt for trade wars, which may create conditions for a shooting war.

A look at Trump’s spoiling-for-a-fight tweet Friday:

TRUMP: “When a country (USA) is losing many billions of dollars on trade with virtually every country it does business with, trade wars are good, and easy to win. Example, when we are down $100 billion with a certain country and they get cute, don’t trade anymore-we win big. It’s easy!”

The facts: History suggests that trade wars are not easy.

The president’s argument, in essence, is that high tariffs will force other countries to relent quickly on what he sees as unfair trading practices, and that will wipe out the trade gap and create factory jobs. That’s his motivation for announcing that the US will impose tariffs of 25 per cent on steel imports and 10 per cent on aluminium imports.

The record shows that tariffs, while they may help certain domestic manufacturers, can come at a broad cost. They can raise prices for consumers and businesses because companies pass on at least some of the higher costs of imported materials to their customers. Winning and losing isn’t as simple a matter as tracking the trade gap.

The State Department’s office of the historian looked at tariffs passed in the 1920s and 1930s to protect farms and other industries that were losing their markets in Europe as the continent recovered from the First World War. The US duties hurt Europe and made it harder for those countries to repay their war debts, while exposing farmers and consumers in the US to higher prices. European nations responded by raising their tariffs and the volume of world trade predictably slowed by 1934.

The State Department says the tariffs exacerbated the global effects of the Great Depression while doing nothing to foster political or economic cooperation among countries. This was a diplomatic way of saying that the economic struggles helped embolden extremist politics and geopolitical rivalries before the Second World War.

Nor have past protectionist measures saved the steel industry, as Trump says his tariffs would.

The United States first became a net importer of steel in 1959, when steelworkers staged a 116-day strike, according to research by Michael O. Moore, a George Washington University economist. After that, US administrations imposed protectionist policies, only to see global competitors adapt and the US share of global steel production decline.

RECENT NEWS

UAE Tax Compliance Grows As FTA Sees 651,000 Corporate Registrants And VAT Refund Surge

UAE Federal Tax Authority reports global-level tax compliance, over 651,000 corporate registrants, and $31.4m in VAT re... Read more

ADGM Turns 10 As Abu Dhabis $28.6tn Finance Hub Achieves Record Growth

ADGM celebrates 10 years of growth with $28.6tn global assets, 308 financial firms, and a 135% rise since 2021 in Abu D... Read more

Aqua Labs Backs UAEs Vision 2030 With Launch Of $20mn Startup Fund

The programme invites founders worldwide to apply for funding, mentorship, and access to Web3 infrastructure The post A... Read more

Alpha Dhabi Sells 8.5% Modon Stake To Abu Dhabi Governments Limad Holding

The wholly owned entity of the Abu Dhabi Government now owns majority share in Modon after buying IHC and ADQ stakes as... Read more

ADNOC Distribution Delivers Its Strongest EBITDA Since IPO For Q3

Quarterly EBITDA of $319mn is the highest ever, up 15.9%; Net profit surged to $221mn, up 21.5%; Record 9M fuel volumes... Read more

PIF Spending Shift To Spur Greenfield FDI In Saudi As Private Equity Expands

Bain’s Gregory Garnier says Saudi's sovereign wealth fund is entering a more disciplined phase, redirecting capital f... Read more