Globalization Is Alive, Well, and Changing
America can join with more free trade or it can miss out.

Free trade is under greater attack today than it has been in decades, especially in the United States. Despite continued public support for foreign trade and globalization generally (even during the height of the COVID-19 pandemic), a bipartisan cadre of American politicians and pundits is increasingly skeptical of, or downright hostile to, the longstanding consensus in favor of trade liberalization. The U.S. government, moreover, increasingly prioritizes national security, economic "resilience," and the people and communities allegedly left behind by our modern and globalized world. The Biden administration's reluctance to remove former President Donald Trump's tariffs or to pursue new trade agreements has, along with pandemic-related supply chain snarls and Russia's invasion of Ukraine, signaled to many that an era of de-globalization is upon us.
Yet, even as its justifications and the global economy change, the current skepticism toward free trade and globalization remains misguided. Academic literature and recent events continue to provide strong economic, geopolitical, and moral support for free trade and the multilateral trading system. There is also little concrete sign that the world—so far, at least—is really de-globalizing, though trade and supply chains, as well as the rules under which they operate, are changing.
Put simply, the death of globalization is greatly exaggerated.
The Criticisms
Today's criticisms of trade and globalization fall into three general categories. From an economic perspective, critics contend that decades of "unfettered free trade" are responsible for widespread "deindustrialization" in the United States and, by extension, increased job loss, depressed family formation, and the erosion of industrial towns, particularly in the Rust Belt. The most common target is U.S. trade with China—in particular, the 2000 U.S. law that granted China permanent normal trade relations and ushered the country into the World Trade Organization (WTO) in 2001. This supposedly drove the now-famous "China Shock" period between 1999 and 2011 during which a sizable increase in Chinese imports caused, according to various economists, the loss of millions of American jobs and associated social ills. Others claim that the U.S. trade deficit—not only with China—is responsible for similar harms since the 1990s, and that globalization's theoretical benefits supposedly fail to match its reality while destroying the lives of millions of American workers and their communities.
Second, critics increasingly claim that international trade has undermined U.S. national security by not only crippling the country's industrial base but also making it dependent on foreign nations, especially potential adversaries, for critical goods. Thus, protectionism and industrial policy are needed to re-shore essential industries not on economic grounds but geopolitical ones. Here again, China looms large, as critics not only blame China's economic rise on U.S. trade policy but also use it to justify trade and investment restrictions on key sectors (like pharmaceuticals or semiconductors) and a broader "decoupling" of the U.S. and Chinese economies. Recent events in Russia and Ukraine supposedly reinforce these concerns.
Finally, there are criticisms based on morality, particularly from self-declared pro-worker populists on the left and (increasingly) the right who claim that globalization sacrifices the common man and vulnerable communities on the altar of economic efficiency and gross domestic product, delivering diffuse benefits to educated, urbanite globalists at the concentrated expense of real Americans. The elites get iPhones, Netflix, and knowledge jobs, they claim, while the working class gets a life of joblessness, government dependency, or worse.
The Reality
In each of these criticisms, there is a nugget of truth, but they remain overwhelmed by the reasons to support free trade and oppose protectionism.
The Economic Case
It's undoubtedly true that international trade, like all forms of market competition, disrupts some American companies and workers that, through government protection, formerly had the U.S. market to themselves. However, the economic case for free trade remains rock solid. American consumers (who are also American workers, by the way) gain from new access to goods and services at lower prices and in greater varieties. These gains come not only from foreign-made items but also from similar domestic ones that are now forced to compete with imports on price and quality. Studies show that trade's "consumer surplus" is far more significant than a few cents on the proverbial cheap T-shirt. Recently, for example, several economists have found that falling prices caused by Chinese imports into the United States during the 2000s generated hundreds of thousands of dollars in consumer benefits for each American job potentially displaced by the China Shock—the equivalent of giving every American "$260 in extra spending per year for the rest of their lives." Similar gains occur outside the United States: European consumers, for example, save €60 billion per year (about $64 billion) from lower tariffs resulting from the European Union's entry into the WTO. Studies also uniformly find that these benefits—again contrary to the conventional wisdom—tend to disproportionately aid the poor and the middle class, who have tighter budgets and concentrate their spending on tradable sectors like food, clothing, footwear, and consumer electronics.
The consumer gains from trade are a big reason why Americans today work far fewer hours to own more and better essentials than at any prior time in history. Dartmouth economist Bruce Sacerdote finds that lower-income Americans' overall consumption (adjusted for inflation) increased by 62 percent to 164 percent between 1960 and 2015, not fully accounting for improvements in quality. In other words, poorer Americans today can consume about twice as many goods and services as their 1960 counterparts, and expanded international trade is undeniably a big reason why.
Additionally, domestic companies and farmers gain financially from exporting their products: Total exports of goods and services hit almost $2.5 trillion in 2019, and the United States was the world's second-largest goods exporter and largest services exporter that same year. Firms also benefit from imports, either by moving and selling foreign-made items in the United States or by using them to produce other things. Indeed, the total value added to wholesale trade, retail trade, and transportation and warehousing was more than $3.1 trillion in 2019—output that in many cases (e.g., Gap or FedEx) wouldn't exist but for global trade. Foreign-made inputs and equipment, moreover, boost American manufacturers' global competitiveness and constitute about half of all goods imported into the United States. The best testaments to these benefits are the thoroughly documented harms that Trump-era tariffs on steel and aluminum inflicted on American manufacturing investment, output, and jobs.
American companies also gain from foreign direct investment—dollars that overseas companies acquired by selling stuff to U.S. consumers and then injected back into the U.S. economy. Foreign investments in U.S.-based companies (e.g., BMW in South Carolina) generated $5 trillion in sales and $1.1 trillion in value-added—the affiliates' direct contribution to GDP—in 2019, and these same firms conducted more than $71 billion in research and development (mostly in manufacturing) that same year. Research also shows that foreign ownership benefits not only U.S.-based affiliates—via increased capital spending, new production or management techniques, or better supplier networks—but also their surrounding communities and neighboring companies. Anyone still doubting such benefits can drive down Interstate 85 from Charlotte, North Carolina, to Montgomery, Alabama, to check out the multinational factories and bustling towns firsthand.
The "corporate" gains from trade inevitably benefit American workers. For example, a 2020 report found that trade directly or indirectly supported approximately 40.6 million jobs. New research also finds that, while only 6 percent of U.S. firms in manufacturing and services are goods traders, these firms account for half of the economy-wide employment today and 60 percent of all new net jobs created after 2008, primarily through the establishment of new businesses. Meanwhile, foreign-owned affiliates in the United States employed almost 8 million Americans in 2019, typically at higher wages than similarly situated workers at U.S.-based competitors.
Trade also has allowed American companies and workers to focus on their comparative advantages in capital-intensive manufacturing and skilled services. The increased prominence of these jobs in the American economy has enabled a transition from manual, inefficient, and even dangerous low-skill jobs to generally safer, more productive, and better-paying ones. A job transporting that cheap T-shirt (e.g., working at Amazon) now pays better, and is more promising, than the job making it.
In general, increased imports into the United States between 1994 and 2019 have coincided with gains in domestic output, employment, and real (median) wages. That same period also saw an increase in the share of American households making more than $100,000 (from 23.8 percent to 34.3 percent) and declines in the shares of middle-income (44.6 percent to 40.3 percent) or low-income (31.8 percent to 25.5 percent) households. In other words, during the hyperglobalization era, the American middle class shrunk because households got richer.
Free trade is also integral to the "creative destruction"—that is, the constant replacement of old firms, jobs, and products with new ones—that raises our living standards. While much of this activity is imperceptible, it is doubtlessly driven by consumers and capital seeking more productive ends in the global marketplace. International competition, for example, has long pushed American companies, such as the Big Three automakers in the 1980s, to improve their products or go out of business. And the money Americans save by buying cheap foreign goods is often spent on, or invested in, promising domestic companies and their higher-skilled workers. The outcome of these unseen transactions is not just "cheaper stuff" but better and once-unimaginable goods, better jobs, better companies, and better lives.
Quantifying the overall benefits of trade is exceedingly complicated and uncertain, but economic studies uniformly show substantial gains. For example, a 2017 Peterson Institute for International Economics study calculated the payoff to the United States from globalization between 1950 and 2016 to be $2.1 trillion ($2.4 trillion in 2021 dollars), increasing GDP per capita and per household by around $7,000 and $18,000 ($7,900 and $20,400 in 2021 dollars), respectively. These benefits, again, accrue disproportionately to households in the bottom income decile.
This does not mean, of course, that all is perfectly fine in the modern American economy. However, the convenient narrative that "globalization" is the primary driver of the nation's most commonly cited economic challenges is misguided. For example, the decline in American manufacturing jobs began decades before imports were little more than a rounding error in the U.S. economy—in 1979 in nominal terms or the mid-1940s as a share of the workforce. These declines are also shared by other advanced economies (including ones with trade surpluses like Germany and Japan) and many emerging markets like China—which shed almost 18 million industrial jobs in 2012–19. In reality, the decline in U.S. manufacturing employment reflects broader, global trends (e.g., productivity gains and changing consumption patterns), not the "American carnage" decried by Trump at his inauguration. It also reflects a shift in worker preferences away from manufacturing; job openings in the sector have averaged more than 850,000 since mid-2021, and manufacturers consistently point to a lack of workers as their biggest impediment, even after offering generous pay raises and signing bonuses.
Other trends also defy the anti-globalization narrative. Male wage stagnation, for example, actually ended before the United States entered the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) in 1994 and the WTO in 1995, and those wages generally increased thereafter. Male labor force participation, meanwhile, has consistently declined since the 1950s. And despite ample job openings and significant pay increases, only a small fraction of non-working, prime-age men today report an interest in getting a job. Troubling trends in marriage and family formation (such as the share of children living with married or cohabiting parents) ceased in the early 1990s and either stabilized or reversed course thereafter. (The troublesome 1980s, by the way, also featured far more U.S. industrial policy, far less global integration, and dozens of competitor countries still foundering under communism or socialism.) Meanwhile, the vast majority of older industrial cities in the United States—the ones most vulnerable to foreign competition—have long since recovered and moved on. That a few remain in dire straits thus speaks less to national trade policy and more to those specific towns, as well as state or local policies that might inhibit adjustment and growth.
And the supply chain crisis? Another miss. For starters, multinational corporations and consumers have been adjusting their practices—diversifying suppliers, building inventories, investing in new capacity, altering spending patterns—since COVID first hit. Keeping trade and investment lanes free from government interference helps facilitate this adjustment. Just as important, there's scant evidence that reshoring supply chains would help the country withstand future economic shocks. Two recent studies (one from the OECD and another from German research network CESifo) found, for example, that an economic shock abroad would hit a "decoupled" U.S. economy just about as hard (in terms of stability or welfare) as our current, globally integrated one. Any meager benefits, moreover, would come with major costs: Insulation from foreign shocks makes a nation more susceptible to domestic shocks (say, a freak ice storm in Texas) and intensifies any resulting pain because local supply chains adapt more slowly than global ones.
Studies also show that moving toward a more localized U.S. economy would reduce economic efficiency and thus increase prices while reducing output. In reality, most supply chain problems have little to do with trade policy and a lot to do with the pandemic and misguided U.S. policies—stimulus checks, tariffs, zoning, environmental regulations, immigration restrictions, etc.—that overheated demand or restricted raw materials, labor, transportation, and construction.
The baby formula crisis provides a timely, albeit terrible, example of these economic realities. Decades of tariff and nontariff (FDA) barriers effectively walled off the U.S. formula market from foreign competition: According to the White House, 98 percent of all formula consumed here is made here. These and other trade restrictions, combined with government welfare contracts that encouraged domestic industry concentration, created a brittle system that crumbled in the face of a serious domestic shock (the Abbott recall and plant closure) and struggled to recover thereafter. Now the Biden administration's solution to the crisis is to fly in formula from abroad—formula that was seized at the border only a few weeks ago.
Other products dominated by domestic production, such as pickup trucks, also suffered from pandemic-related supply chain problems in 2020–21, as much as their "globalized" counterparts, if not more so. The lesson in each case is the same: protectionism doesn't improve economic resilience—it usually makes things worse.
Even the damage attributed to the 1999–2011 China Shock has been wildly oversold. Along with the aforementioned consumer benefits from Chinese imports, numerous studies completed since that period reveal fewer American jobs were lost than the 2.4 million often claimed; substantial employment gains in services and export-oriented industries; and net economic benefits for the U.S. manufacturing sector and the country as a whole (about 96 percent of all U.S. workers came out ahead). Even if one were to treat the China Shock as economic gospel, moreover, perspective is sorely needed: The total American jobs lost due to the 11-year China Shock are less than half of the approximately 5 million job separations that occur each month in a healthy U.S. economy, and the 1 million lost manufacturing jobs would constitute less than 20 percent of all such losses (and less than 5 percent of all job losses) over the same period.
Recent analyses also show that low-skill manufacturing employment and "late stage" industries with routine, standardized processes likely would have suffered the same fate in the last two decades, regardless of the China Shock, due to competition from other developing countries and non-trade issues such as automation. In fact, data show that from 1990 to 2017, Chinese imports replaced other imports (particularly those from Asia), not domestic production and that this trend reversed—lower Chinese imports and greater imports from Vietnam, Mexico, and elsewhere—when Trump's China tariffs were implemented.
These numbers answer a question that economic nationalists and China hawks rarely ask: What would have happened without the China Shock? They indicate that Chinese import restrictions would not have saved most of the American manufacturing jobs destroyed between 1999 and 2011—those jobs would have simply been lost due to other things, including technology and non-China imports. (Indeed, that's just what happened when President Barack Obama slapped 35 percent tariffs on Chinese tires back in 2009.) Economists have long understood that adjustment to economic shocks—whether due to trade, technology, pandemics, or whatever—is never easy, but there's nothing about the China Shock, which ended a decade ago, so novel or harmful as to justify abandoning a century of scholarship and experience on the overall benefits of free trade.
Finally, the last few years have forced us to re-learn about the failures of the only alternative to free trade, protectionism. Studies show, for example, that American consumers, both companies and individuals, bore most of the burden of the Trump administration's tariffs on home appliances, solar panels, steel, aluminum, and Chinese-origin goods. Downstream manufacturing firms have been forced to pay higher prices for metals than their global counterparts, thus costing them sales and jobs; exporters (farmers and manufacturers) have lost competitiveness due to higher input costs and foreign retaliation; and investment has suffered due to uncertainty surrounding American and global trade policy. The tariffs also failed to achieve their objectives. Global steel overcapacity, for example, remains a problem; there's been no revival of domestic solar panel production; Chinese economic malfeasance has actually increased (likely in response to U.S. tariffs and sanctions); and Beijing's hardline stances on human rights, free speech, the South China Sea, and other issues have deteriorated further.
Engagement thus remains the worst trade policy—except for all the others that have been tried.
The Geopolitical Case
The multilateral trading system arose in the second half of the 20th century, not only from a desire for global economic growth or to empower global consumers but mainly from a fear that the division of the world into competing economic blocs could again fuel global military conflict. Fresh out of two world wars that began, in part, due to trade conflicts, the founders of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) believed that countries that traded with each other (and thus had access to an institutionalized means for resolving commercial disputes) would be less prone to engaging in geopolitical competition or armed conflict with each other. And this system, for all its fits and starts, has met this aim reasonably well for over seven decades: The GATT and its successor, the WTO, have provided an avenue for the peaceful resolution of trade disputes and for countries to commit to a series of rules and economic reforms, mainly as a prerequisite for accession to the organization, that increase global interdependence and make bilateral disputes less likely to emerge. Even China signed on to the rules and undertook reforms, with subsequent backsliding more a failure of WTO members' enforcement efforts than of the rules themselves.
Numerous studies have also found that increased trade leads to fewer armed conflicts among states—a core national security objective. As countries trade more with each other or become more exposed to each other's growth, they are less prone to engage in conflict, and they often form deeper alliances. These security benefits are driven by several factors. First, trade makes countries more economically interdependent, thus making future conflict more costly. Second, trade and bargaining are more cost-effective ways of resolving disputes and obtaining foreign resources. Third, trade increases material prosperity and promotes mutual tolerance and understanding. And fourth, trade can limit the power of domestic constituencies that benefit from armed conflict.
Russia's invasion of Ukraine does little to undermine these points, and in some ways, it enhances them. Neither the academic literature nor all but the most overzealous pundits claim that trade prevents armed conflict, but that it simply makes interstate violence less likely. The Russia-Ukraine clash may therefore be considered an exception to a decadeslong decline in wars between trading partners and deaths from cross-border conflict. Vladimir Putin's "Fortress Russia" strategy, moreover, worked to reduce Russian engagement abroad so that the nation could withstand economic blowback resulting from its foreign aggression. Prior to the Ukraine invasion, in fact, Russia was relatively isolated economically, sporting a trade/GDP ratio well below the global average.
Yet public and private sanctions still inflicted immense economic pain on the Russian economy, while "globalized" smartphones, VPNs, and social media thwarted Putin's propaganda machine. Governments could pursue financial sanctions because of Russia's continued reliance on the U.S. dollar—currency obtained due to international trade. These and related events might also serve as a warning to other illiberal countries with extraterritorial ambitions, especially those like China which are far more integrated into the global economy. According to numerous reports, Beijing's hesitancy to fully embrace Russia during the Ukraine conflict stems from concerns about the repercussions for a globalized China, which has already suffered sustained capital outflows since Putin invaded. Thus, isolating China economically might make future conflict in Taiwan or elsewhere more likely, not less.
Finally, allowing developing countries access to the U.S. market can decrease the appeal and perceived benefits of joining terrorist organizations and networks because it demonstrably produces not only economic growth but also better opportunities and improved standards of living in impoverished regions. These benefits are particularly important for developed countries at risk of bordering states' poverty or instability spilling into their territories through increased migration or refugee flows. The easiest way to slow migration from poorer Latin American countries to the United States is to make potential migrants wealthier at home via trade.
The Moral Case
As Adam Smith wrote in The Wealth of Nations, "Man is an animal that bargains." Humans are unique in our ability to peacefully exchange goods and services to meet our needs. For millennia, we have built cultures, societies, and systems around the principle of voluntary trade. In doing so, we have come to act naturally as equals—even though we may be of different ages, genders, nationalities, races, or religions. When individuals can freely pursue their self-interest through trade, obtaining value by providing value, the "invisible hand" yields economic and social outcomes that benefit society at large.
Intended or not, American trade liberalization has removed many of the political barriers that thwart these voluntary, beneficial human interactions and the many inequities that prevailed in the previous, more protectionist U.S. system. Trade restrictions have long propped up certain politically powerful U.S. workers and industries (in steel, sugar, textiles, etc.) via hidden, regressive taxes on all other Americans, making the country poorer overall in the process. And it is immoral for the government not only to prioritize the protected groups' well-being above that of other Americans but to do so at the latter's direct expense. Removing tariffs might create pains for formerly-protected workers and companies now competing for their neighbors' once-captive dollars, but moral claims based on that disruption ignore that the protection itself never should have been there in the first place.
The morality of trade doesn't stop at the water's edge either: The lowering of U.S. trade barriers, along with American leadership forming agreements and participating in trade institutions such as the WTO, has produced immeasurable benefits for the world's poorest people. The International Labour Organization reports that between 1993 and 2018, for example, the share of working individuals in low- and middle-income countries living in extreme poverty (less than $1.90 a day, in purchasing power parity terms) fell from 41.7 percent to 9.8 percent—a decline of about 550 million people. Other studies show that trade helps these workers not only consume more but also move from subsistence and informal activities to formal wage or salary work. Child labor is disappearing too: The overall number of child workers (ages 5–17) decreased by approximately 38 percent, or 94 million, between 2000 and 2016—benefits especially important for women and girls who were once simply married off (or worse).
Globalization Isn't Going Anywhere
Fortunately, rumors of globalization's demise have been, yet again, greatly exaggerated. The share of global GDP of the goods trade was down in 2020 from its 2008 peak, yet it was still historically high—well above levels seen during the supposed hyperglobalization heyday of the 1990s and right around where it was in 2016. This widely-cited figure, moreover, is a lousy indicator of what's really going on in the global economy. For starters, goods trade was destined to slow eventually (some goods aren't amenable to long-distance shipping and multinational production) as more economies moved from manufacturing into services (many of which are, like construction, nontradeable). Furthermore, the supposedly retrenching U.S. saw inflation-adjusted merchandise trade (imports plus exports) reach record levels in 2021. Global trade also hit a record high last year, as did trade in industrial inputs (a sign of companies' use of global value chains). And both the Panama and Suez canals saw record traffic, with the latter being expanded to handle even more cargo in the future.
Even more importantly, goods trade is only one part of the globalization story. Most obviously, global trade in services continued to increase before the pandemic and is now expanding again as countries reopen. The key here is the explosion in digital trade—the cross-border delivery and consumption of both "information and communication technology" products (smartphones, software, etc.) and traditional services enabled by those same technologies (legal advice, research and development, online education, etc.). Monthly global data traffic is expected to more than triple (from 230 exabytes to 780 exabytes) between 2020 and 2026, and international bandwidth—the best measure of cross-border data flows—saw 30 percent increases in both 2020 and 2021 (with much more on tap). Quantifying digital trade is difficult because traditional statistics have a hard time capturing the origins, volume, and value of these transactions. Nevertheless, back-of-napkin estimates reveal trillions of dollars in unseen economic activity.
Other aspects of globalization, such as international migration and capital flows, also remain at historically high levels. Countries continue to sign trade agreements, such as the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (formerly the Trans-Pacific Partnership), the larger (but less ambitious) Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership, and the 54-nation African Continental Free Trade Area. And "cultural globalization" continues apace: Foreign cuisines are so commonplace in America that grocers struggle to stuff them all in the "ethnic" aisle; Puerto Rico's Bad Bunny topped Spotify's charts rapping in Spanish; and the most-watched show on Netflix last year was in Korean. If the world is "de-globalizing," it has a weird way of showing it.
Finally, the pandemic and Russia have surely caused multinationals to rethink their supply chains, but this is far more re-globalization than de-globalization. American companies, for example, have shifted some operations out of China mainly to Southeast Asia or Mexico, not back home. Declines in Russian or Ukrainian commodities, moreover, have pushed international buyers to turn not inward but to Canada, South Africa, Latin America, the United States, and India. Inventory and related systems have also been overhauled (less "just-in-time" and more "just-in-case"), and the market is booming for supply chain and logistics technologies that let multinationals better track shipments and processes.
In short, global business is still very much global. It's just different from what it was a few years ago. And it'll be different again in a few more.
Free trade certainly isn't painless, but its disruptions do not outweigh its tremendous economic benefits for both the country and the world. Such pains cannot obscure trade's geopolitical importance and fundamental morality, as well as the inefficacy of the lone alternative to free trade, protectionism. The challenges created by seismic shifts in industrial production, the rise of China, and even a once-in-a-lifetime pandemic are some of the most difficult of our time, and the solutions are neither clear nor easy. But a rejection of free trade wouldn't benefit the United States or correct its problems; it would probably make things worse.
Globalization will continue to grow with or without the U.S. government's endorsement. It would be far better for American policymakers to join in than to embrace economic isolation.
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One valuable lesson learned from the libertarians: when you have to trot out the economists to explain why something is a good idea, it isn't.
Republican anti-free-traders, protectionists step #1:
Tear down the WTO that tries to adjudicate trade disputes, so that more nations can get more protectionist, and then, all of the nations will get RICHER!
Republican anti-free-traders, protectionists step #2:
Tear down the USA Constitution that tries to adjudicate trade disputes between states, with that silly “interstate commerce” clause, so that more states can get more protectionist, and then, all of the states will get RICHER!
Republican anti-free-traders, protectionists step #3:
Tear down ideas about stupid “free trading” between different cities in the same state. Good jobs for good citizens of Des Moines!
Republican anti-free-traders, protectionists step #4: Good jobs ONLY for those who dwell in the house of SQRLSY One! No one else DESERVES to trade with me!!! I will do my own iron ore mining, smelting, tool manufacture, food growing, cloth weaving, home dentistry, you name it… It is actually a straight-line ticket to utter poverty!!!
When are ignorant bastards going to wake the fuck up?
You wouldn't want the laws of economics getting in the way of your feels.
I'm not interested in "Wreck Your Country for Fun and Profit", no. In terms of national interest, the economy is what I consider after I've considered everything else.
I'm sure having our nuclear arsenal manufactured in China makes great sense economically. But for some reason, nobody thinks it's a great idea.
Free trade certainly isn't painless, but its disruptions do not outweigh its tremendous economic benefits for both the country and the world.....Globalization will continue to grow with or without the U.S. government's endorsement.
Globalization and free trade were premised on the theory that attaining cheaper goods globally and exporting menial jobs to developing countries would allow Americans to focus on intellectual labor. Twenty years later, we have far too many goods (greed, unbridled capitalism) with Americans not interested in engaging cerebral work. Sloth has become the norm in America. We are not the country JFK challenged Americans to be vis a vis encouraging STEM in schools and adopting an unrelenting drive to be the best of the best in the physical sciences. Globalization has created an American populace who demand to be coddled: jobs, health benefits, goods, services, goods (Walmart, Costco, Amazon) et al. We have regressed tremendously in no small part because Americans lack drive, goals and a fire within to excel. Americans demand jobs, even if menial jobs, as opposed to being entrepreneurs, being self-employed and providing their own goods for their families and communities. Globalization was built on the assumption that people wanted to personally excel through their own merits. That assumption has proven to be tragically wrong.
It is time for America to focus on America and cut off our reliance on global supply chains. COVID has shown us global supply chains brought us to our knees. Close the borders, halt immigration, stop dependence on China, launch a national effort in the spirit of JFK's 1961 presidential inauguration speech, to "build back better" and "make America great again".
And so, my fellow Americans: ask not what your country can do for you — ask what you can do for your country. My fellow citizens of the world: ask not what America will do for you, but what together we can do for the freedom of man. Finally, whether you are citizens of America or citizens of the world, ask of us the same high standards of strength and sacrifice which we ask of you. With a good conscience our only sure reward, with history the final judge of our deeds, let us go forth to lead the land we love, asking His blessing and His help, but knowing that here on earth God's work must truly be our own.
https://www.ushistory.org/documents/ask-not.htm
"Globalization and Free Trade"
https://fee.org/articles/globalization-and-free-trade/
"Globalization and Its Discontents"
https://www.henryakissinger.com/articles/globalization-and-its-discontents/
Not everyone is capable of intellectual labor. And what we see is that in practice not all demographics are equally good at it either (for a myriad of reasons). Now we have to recreate society so that idiots can achive the same as smart people in a intellectual labor market.
To be clear, there is an outsourcing of the intellectual jobs as well. I used to work in that sector, your H1B jobs should rightly be filled by US citizens but we actually displace workers to move in cheaper foreigners. The system is broken because it incentivises cheap labor and goods over the well being of the country and citizens as a whole. Furthermore, what happens if we stop getting along with China? We have lost the ability to fend for ourselves on a lot of fronts. You'd be hard pressed to convince me any of this benefits the US citizens in the long run.
exactly this nation used to be self sufficient and at one time the bread basket to the world, but now one little skirmish and we can't feed ourselves. we could if we Bien opened up more farm land and we quit taking crops to make fuel. we are literally strangling ourselves for others who would like to see us fail as well.
Free trade is great when it is free but you still have to support yourself
"Globalization and free trade were premised on the theory that attaining cheaper goods globally and exporting menial jobs to developing countries would allow Americans to focus on intellectual labor."
But this is exactly what happened. You may not like that Americans by and large went into intellectual fields like Teaching, Law, Social Media Marketing, while eschewing STEM courses, but they did.
The damage here was not done by "Unbridled Capitalism" but by cultural rot, enabled by government. People go looking for all these convoluted causes and effects, when it is very very simple: When the government (through easy money) lets you piss away hundreds of thousands of dollars on any degree, people will learn whatever is easiest or interesting to them, while tending to avoid hard shit. And it just so happens the hard shit pays pretty damn well.
"COVID has shown us global supply chains brought us to our knees. "
This is absurd. Because we couldn't get toilet paper on demand for 2 weeks the US was on its knees? Talk about being made soft. Government brought the United States to its knees, by locking everyone in their houses for 1 - 2 years. And yet no one starved. That is historically unprecedented.
Supply chain shortages today are largely caused by terrible monetary policy. GM and Ford cannot get microchips for their cars because they have to compete with Rivian, who has $30 Billion in capital to throw around despite selling a hand full of cars. This isn't "unbridled capitalism's" fault. It is the fault of unbridled monetary pumping. QE that has turned hundreds or thousands of companies into zombies dependent on eaaaaaasy money.
There is plenty to be said about Globalization's inability to turn Russia and China into more liberal countries. But capitalism is also about profit and loss. And our government has done everything in its power to shield americans from the latter. Without experiencing loss, you do not learn. You do not abandon shit that isn't working. You don't double down on stuff that IS working. That isn't the fault of Capitalism, it is the fault of government and its cronies telling people that they can have their cake and eat it too, for free!
"The damage here was not done by "Unbridled Capitalism" but by cultural rot, enabled by government. People go looking for all these convoluted causes and effects, when it is very very simple: When the government (through easy money) lets you piss away hundreds of thousands of dollars on any degree, people will learn whatever is easiest or interesting to them, while tending to avoid hard shit."
How is affording young people with the choices to study what they find to be the most rewarding fields an example of 'cultural rot?'
"That isn't the fault of Capitalism, it is the fault of government "
How does this make any sense? It's all of a piece. The Capitalists get the government they pay for. This time it's Joe Biden's turn, a career long corporate stooge.
"How is affording young people with the choices to study what they find to be the most rewarding fields an example of 'cultural rot?'"
It is cultural rot because people don't learn TANSTAAFL.
"The Capitalists get the government they pay for. This time it's Joe Biden's turn, a career long corporate stooge."
Mtrueman thinks that a government command and control of the economy is capitalism at work. smh.
"It is cultural rot because people don't learn TANSTAAFL."
Again how is this cultural? Surely the blame lies with the individuals who study things you disapprove of, or fail to learn lessons you consider vital. Why not blame them instead of some amorphous culture?
So, it is time for you to tell everyone who they can and can't trade with?
Fuck off, slaver.
"So, it is time for you to tell everyone who they can and can't trade with?"
It's been that time for a while now. The US has imposed more sanctions regimes, and for longer periods, than any other country on the planet. The US has increased using sanctions since 2016, imposing them on more than 1,000 entities or individuals yearly, on average, from 2016 to 2020 – nearly 80% more than in 2008-2015.
"Twenty years later, we have far too many goods (greed, unbridled capitalism)..."
WTF? People have "too many" of the things they want due to greed? Jesus H. Christ on a pogo stick! Are you wishing for people NOT to get the things they want? Is wanting things "greed"? Are you going to tell us what is proper for people to want, and what is excessive?
As for national protectionism, why not take this to the state level? Counties and towns? WTF trade at all?
I will give you half credit. Most people have indeed been able to get the things they want due to capitalism.
' People have "too many" of the things they want due to greed?"
Public and private debt has been increasing dramatically for some time now. You can buy an iphone on credit today, only to find a year from now it's obsolete and essentially worthless. Debts remain however and erode personal and public freedoms.
re: "Public and private debt has been increasing dramatically for some time now."
No, they actually haven't. Or more specifically, public debt is skyrocketing because our politicians have all the fiscal discipline of drunken sailors on a three-week binge but private debt has been falling for over a decade. See here for a chart of average household debt as a percentage of income.
Yes, you can buy an iphone on credit and decide that it's obsolete a year later - and the very globalization you're complaining about is why prices of phones have fallen (and continue to fall) such that you can even consider replacing a phone that often.
"U.S. household debt climbed to a record high of $15.0 trillion in the second quarter of 2021, as mortgage debt climbed to $10.4 billion amid a refinancing boom. According to the New York Fed’s latest Household Debt and Credit Report, mortgage debt increased by a whopping $282 billion between April and June. "
https://www.statista.com/chart/19955/household-debt-balance-in-the-united-states/
That's good news for the banking and rentier sector, but I don't see it as good for personal freedom and autonomy, nor as reflecting well on the capitalist system. People need a roof over their head, mobility and education, nobody wants debt servitude.
Increases in absolute amounts of debt are irrelevant. Again, debt as a fraction of income continues to fall.
In other words, thank god for inflation. Let me guess, you're also an enthusiastic supporter of economic sanctions.
Did you know the calculation for GDP subtracts imports?
So if GDP is the be all end all measurement of economic health, then importing lowers our GDP.
Import agreements should be based on two things:
1) We don’t have access to critical raw materials needed to manufacture a widget
2) The import agreement opens up an export market in our favor.
Caveats for security.
Free Trade frequently neglects such key evaluations for import.
"Did you know the calculation for GDP subtracts imports?"
GDP also counts government spending. So if we wanted to control GDP, we could just make everyone a government employee and dictate an increase in all prices, and voila! Increased GDP!
More seriously, you are only counting half of the effect of imports.
Let's say I send out $10,000 to Korea and bring back a fine new CNC Laser cutter. According to GDP, we have lost $10,000. But we also have a $10,000 asset (which appears on the economic balance sheet that no one bothers to consult). And when my company uses it to produce $100,000 in profits, the GDP grows by that much.
Get rid of that import, and you increase GDP by $10,000 while reducing it by $100,000. That isn't the smart play.
If you make the laser cutter here which we used to do then not only do you employ more people but you increase the GDP. it does not have to be import or nothing happens. we traded so much to china that they now don't need to export to us anymore if they felt like it which is pretty much hapening now
"If you make the laser cutter here which we used to do then not only do you employ more people but you increase the GDP."
Except it doesn't work that way in practice. In practice, when you are forced to pay more for your domestic equipment, your profit margins are squeezed- sometimes to the extent that your business can't even do its job. On the whole, by making inputs more expensive, you overall decrease the GDP growth.
" we traded so much to china that they now don't need to export to us anymore if they felt like it which is pretty much hapening now"
This is just not a statement based in reality.
The question is WHY does it cost more?
Free Trade allows us to be lazy about what we are doing wrong (or even right) here. Same with H1B and illegal immigration for cheap labor.
Why is it more expensive to make here? What makes it cheaper there? Are we so lacking in confidence in our embracing safe work environments and environmental regs that we aren’t willing to put our money where our mouth is?
Free Trade makes us complacent to the rot here in this country which furthers the decline here. You aren’t invested, so you don’t actually care that regulations make it impossible to make a profit or that cost of living and the state of education makes our population expensive and incompetent to employ.
I didn’t actually ignore that. My number 2 covers that exact scenario.
No it didn't. In my scenario, I imported a machine and sold all my goods locally. Without sending $10,000 out of the country, I would not have $100,000 of local business.
Good to see Cato endorsing the Chinese theft of IP, rape camps, forced organ donation and genocide because free trade over all.
We have become too dependent on China for too many things. That’s bad.
Good to see that FINALLY, after 4 years of Trumpist trade-war-mongering, PLUS another 1.5 years of the same by Biden, trade wars have FINALLY worked now, and ALL the mainland Chinese former "slave laborers" are now TOTALLY free!!! Let's all move to Freest of the Free, mainland China!
Stupid Reason. Self sufficiency is prosperity. Everyone knows this.
There are two things occurring in parallel that often times overlap and are mistaken for one another. One is the globalization of trade, and the other is the globalization of politics.
The former is pretty straightforward and the topic of the article. However, there is also a globalization of political power going on that adversely affects any academic benefits of globalization.
Free trade is great and may bring us world peace, however, all global trade is governed through politics. And right now there is a concerted effort for the globalization and consolidation of government. The EU is a perfect example. Rather than use the US's model for a small, narrow federal government, they've continued to use government and bureaucracy as a security blanket to wrap and protect all Europeans. For generations people have been trying to consolidate power over the European continent. They're doing a pretty good job so far.
It's this consolidation of political power that is the cause for deglobalization. Businesses are seeing that overseas diversification needs to be far more diverse. Rather than leveraging the benefits that come from the diversification available in global trade, the world instead consolidated a lot of the sourcing and manufacturing into one part of the world.
If libertarians are correct that the commerce clause has led to excesses of the federal government, the free trade directly leads to an increased governing force over that trade. The behemoth of the US government is a consequence of free trade among the states. The behemoth of the EU is a consequence of free trade among the EU nations. Global governing bodies grow as free trade gains larger global purchase.
Simulating free trade in nationally governed trade agreements is not perfect, but it keeps governance with the sovereign bodies engaged in the agreement.
"Simulating free trade in nationally governed trade agreements is not perfect, but it keeps governance with the sovereign bodies engaged in the agreement."
Hillary Clinton has told us the same thing repeatedly. She's also assured us that these agreements are the best bet for liberalizing authoritarian regimes and encouraging them to adopt western values.
And if she won an election, it would be in her purview to make such trade agreements. But she never will. So if you are concerned about that, don’t vote for someone who would make free trade agreements with vile countries.
To farm out our sovereignty to a global regulatory board means you do not have ANY say over how our trade agreements occur and under what conditions. At least with sovereign states ordering their own trade agreements, the state’s chosen ordered government has control. In the states, that means YOU have control in so far as you can convince your fellow citizens of your position.
"So if you are concerned about that, don’t vote for someone who would make free trade agreements with vile countries."
Are you sure we need governments to make free trade agreements in the first place? Seems to me that all countries are governed by vile governments, including our own. And global regulatory boards are no better, and less susceptible to popular opinion than even the most authoritarian governments. I understand some trade must be regulated or prohibited, we don't want people selling our enemies the ropes to hang us, for example, but national laws should be sufficient.
I read somewhere that Ricardo's original analysis of comparative advantage, the trade of wine and cloth between England and Portugal, is hopelessly simplistic, with only two parties involved. In reality there are hundreds if not thousands of significant parties involved in global trade making coherent analysis essentially impossible. Given that, do these agreements make any sense?
That wellspring of free trade, the Peoples Liberation Army , employs the world's largest and most cost-effective student workforce. Where would Reason editors be without three million nimble-fingered Uyghurs working off their Re-education camp tuition, room & board by producing goods for America's forest of Dollar Tree stores?
Are the workers of mainland China now better off after 4 years of trade-war-mongering by Trump, and another 1.5 years by Biden? If they're not yet free, how many MORE years of trade wars do you want (and higher prices for everyone worldwide, for lost efficiency of workplace specialization)? How MANY more years do you need, till it will FINALLY work?
Yellow slaves matter
The Moral Case
The ubiquitous social credit and surveillance system the Chinese have implemented was built by American and European tech companies. Globalization may have created a Chinese middle class, but it also helped enslave 1.5 billion people.
It used to be that the left was openly hostile to economic liberty while the right at least pretended like they supported it.
Now neither political camp supports economic liberty. And no, lower taxes don't count. I'm talking about the freedom to do business with people of your choosing without government interference.
We're not talking about economic liberty. We're talking about trade that benefits hostile foreign countries.
You shouldn't have the freedom to do business with Nazi Germany, free of government interference.
We're in a shooting war with China?
Firing bullets isn't the only way to fight a war. China is at war with us, but we're not in it yet. We're just standing here sucking our thumbs while they fire on us.
By the way, nations don't trade. Individuals trade. When you buy something made in China you're not doing business with a country. You're making a trade with someone who lives in China. All trade is between individuals.
"All trade is between individuals."
Governments at all levels take a slice of the action, don't they?
If you're going to go that route then buying wine from California is the same as contributing to Newsome's campaign fund.
I'm not sure. As I understand a lot of the day to day work of a politician is talking on the phone securing campaign funds. Taxes may fund some of the cost of electioneering, but it's very small in comparison to the amounts actually raised and spent.
When you buy something made in China you're not doing business with a country.
Probably a bad example. Oftentimes you are doing business with the PRC (and by extension the CCP) itself, explicitly or implicitly.
I'm not going to pretend that disentangling from China is going to be beneficial for the American economy on net, but that's a shit sandwich I'm prepared to take a bite out of. The last couple of years have proven that nation's detractors right about it, repeatedly.
Bullshit. There are no private businesses in China. All business done with the Chinese is with the Chinese Communist Party.
That's just factually incorrect.
That’s true of larger businesses. The guy selling fruit from a cart on the street is not partnering with the CCP.
He’s also not exporting to the US.
"We're talking about trade that benefits hostile foreign countries."
The trade sanctions against Russia seem to be benefiting the country, as the rouble exchange rate indicates. Trade sanctions seem to hurt only the weakest. Countries under sanctions show lowered infant birth weights and increased infant mortality, for example.
You shouldn't have the freedom to do business with Nazi Germany, free of government interference.
You should, but you should become a pariah to your community for doing so. Canceled so to speak.
In time of declared war instead would make you the enemy and sanctioned appropriately.
But you retain your right to trade with whom you choose as long as you can exercise it.
Hundreds of millions are facing famine thanks to war and sanctions. Almost 20 thousand trade sanctions have been instituted this year against Russia, and these overwhelmingly target exports of food and fertilizer, and to a lesser extent, energy. It was to Russia, last week, that the leader of the African Union traveled to seek assurances from Putin. The Congo gets some 80% of her grain from Russia and Ukraine.
The third world is facing starvation because Russia decided to not only blockade Ukraine from exporting their wheat and sunflower oil they are also waging scorched earth throughout a good portion of the Ukrainian farmland. Not to mention the Russians have stolen Ukrainian wheat in cities they've over run.
The sanctions against Russia are meant to prevent exports of food and fertilizer to countries that depend on them. Fuel, to a lesser extent. The resulting inflation means that hundreds of millions are facing a western orchestrated famine. The sanctions will punish the poorest of the planet, while Russia has adapted and is even thriving under them, judging by rouble exchange rates.
"The third world is facing starvation because Russia decided to not only blockade Ukraine from exporting their wheat and sunflower oil they are also waging scorched earth throughout a good portion of the Ukrainian farmland."
Blaming Russia for the impending food crisis is often repeated in the bourgeois press, most recently by Canada's minister of foreign affairs: "Russia is blocking the exit routes for Ukraine’s grain. We need to make sure that these cereals are sent to the world. If not, millions of people will be facing famine.”
In fact Russia is a far bigger exporter of essential food items and other products than Ukraine. Russia is the world’s largest wheat exporter, accounting for almost three times as much of world exports as Ukraine, 18% compared with 7%. Even more important, is the situation with fertilizers. Russia is the world’s largest fertilizer exporter, and Belarus, also facing Western sanctions, is also a major supplier – together they account for more than 20% of the global supply. It's this shortage of fertilizer that could have the most devastating effects on the world's poor, killing far more than the combined casualties of the war in Ukraine.
Walter Duranty lives !
It is you who are parroting the New York Times on the issue. Duranty is dead. His employer and chief booster lives on.
Probably shouldn't have started that nakedly aggressive war in Ukraine then. Then Russia could be exporting along with Ukraine.
The guy who murders his parents doesn't get to claim being an orphan as mitigating circumstances in front of the judge.
Why would Russia care? What "judge" do you think Russia has to answer to? Russia doesn't face starvation, the Ruble seems strong, and it looks like they are making progress in Ukraine.
None of Russia's actions by themselves would have caused food shortages. The West had a choice: stand up to Russia's aggression and cause food shortages and massive economic harm to the rest of the world, or to acquiesce to Russia's aggression and avoid those consequences. The West made its choice and now we have to live with the consequences.
There was an option before that. Actually listening to where their red line was and not seeing how close to it you could get without provoking them. Russia clearly is a more serious country than we are (Obama’s red line was a joke).
The US and the West played stupid games with NATO and Ukraine. Stupid games have stupid prizes.
"The US and the West played stupid games with NATO and Ukraine."
There's nothing stupid about this. The US has deepened her hold over Europe, dictating the embargo on cheaper Russian fossil fuels, a large increase in military spending in Germany, something Trump never managed, and drawing heretofore neutral countries like Sweden closer into the clutches of the empire. An orchestrated famine that could kill hundreds of millions of the world's poor may delight the elites of Davos, but it's not stupidity, it's criminal.
Right now people believe the dearth of good jobs is caused by offshoring. We need to show them instead the lack of good jobs is because government bureaucrats use their political power to skim the available funding for themselves. Doing so retards economic growth and therefore reduces available jobs.
The growth of the bloated middle management class, installed based on credentialism and obedience, is killing prospects more than any one other thing
Any management can be redundant, but claiming so as a class is business illiteracy. Further middle management is the first item cleared when a business retrenches, so it is never permanent. This is completely different from the perpetual apparatchiks in government who effectively permanent even when they demonstrably provide zero value.
Middle managers serve the exact same role in modern corps.
I'm not saying they're all incompetent or unnecessary, just as all administrators at universities or bureaucrats in government aren't all unnecessary, but their numbers are bloated as hell.
https://twitter.com/coldhealing/status/1533093790503821315?t=TzSLzPYz6JBdnASMV0O62g&s=19
[Video]
https://www.city-journal.org/wokeness-the-highest-stage-of-managerialism
I'm not sure which shocks me more: the downright libertarian bent of this article, or the downright autocratic, anti-free-trade attitude in some of the comments. Is today opposite day?
I’m curious. Do you think an expanding global government is libertarian or a neutral? Do you think a global government would be benign?
I'm curious. Do you think you ask relevant, inciteful questions?
Do you think you ask relevant, inciteful questions?
He has made his point that Libertarian Free Trade (as you seem to envisage) is being implemented as an expanding global government as envisaged by cultures hostile to Western Civilization and Free Trade.
Your vision of Free trade isn't what we have; I'm sure (from his previous comments) he agrees with Free Trade philosophically.
My primary animating force is subsidiarity. The closer to the individual decisions are made, the better. The further removed government is from the individual, the less decisions it should make.
If a facsimile of free trade can be achieved without outsourcing our governance to a global regulatory board (that will morph into more, like the EU), then I’d be fine with it.
I just find our sovereignty to be a higher priority than that, so I’d forego free trade to maintain sovereignty if it were a trade off.
What is "shocking" is that people like you are trying to pretend that unelected global government and highly restrictive and managed trade between authoritarian regimes amounts to "libertarianism".
Are you actually this stupid, or are you just a propagandist for authoritarians?
is a unified planet inevitable?
"Workers of the world, unite!"
No. It's impossible.
I hope not. I enjoy the concept.
It's not inevitable.
lol.
No, it's not inevitable. And we should hope it never happens.
Large, politically unified entities are horrible for the people living in them. The best political arrangement historically has been large numbers of largely autonomous, competitive small nations.
The transition to globalization is a many-decades long process we're roughly 2.5 decades into. I hope that means we're halfway, but even if not the dislocative impact is disproportionately in the front-end. We've already gone through the worst of it. These impacts are serious, but if you compare them to the only other comparable economic trend, industrialization, we're dealing with these impacts reasonably well. Industrialization ended with events like the Highland Clearances, which we should (and at least somewhat have) learn(ed) from.
But the end result is adding 4 billion people to the global economy. Once we achieve stability the jobs will spread back out, and this stabilization is already happening where the rate of loss is far less and some jobs are re-shoring because the price benefit is not worth the other costs and risks. Things are getting better. The biggest mistake we could make is to try to stop the inevitable which will increase the price while pushing off the cost benefits and the end-stability we desire.
You haven't been paying attention to the social unrest and increasing authoritarianism in the West, the massive increase in economic inequality, the massive economic disruption in China, huge economically driven migrations, or the rise of totalitarians and socialists around the globe.
No, things are not getting better; the kind of fake free trade that "globalization" amounts to has been highly destructive and is little more than a mix of corporate cronyism, vote buying, and corruption.
If you want true globalization, we need to start with creating free markets and then set up free trade between those free markets.
It is intrinsically impossible to have free trade between authoritarian nations and/or social welfare states.
There is more to life than free trade. Becoming dependent on other countries that may eventually not like us is not going to turn out well. Just ask the Europeans.
That's what I find confusing about the libertarian position of free trade. International free trade doesn't support individual liberty, it supports dependancy. I'd consider myself a lot freer being in the position to tell China to pound sand than being dependent on buying cheap junk from them.
They basically admit that: being dependent on other countries inhibits the ability to go to war with them. Pretty much it's hippy economics. "Peace, man! What are you gonna use your national autonomy for anyway, man?".
International free trade between free market economies could support individual liberty.
The faux-free trade the globalists are advocating obvious does not; instead, it props up hostile regimes using slave labor and allows them to corrupt our government, buy our politicians, steal our intellectual property, and try to destroy us.
A modicum of trade protectionism to support the labor market is a vastly superior alternative to the welfare state.
Trade between the US (a massive social welfare state in which the government controls 50% of the GDP) and China (a communist dictatorship using slave labor) cannot ever be "free trade"
Yes, and those same American consumers pay several hundred thousand dollars for the social welfare state that now needs to deal with the joblessness, drug addiction, and broken family of those displaced American workers.
Worse yet, by artificially increasing consumer demand through the use of below labor market rates for Chinese slave labor, the US government artificially shifts money from capital investments into consumption.
Free trade between free market economies is good.
But the kind of "globalization" you advocate is a mix of Keynesianism, socialism, special interest handouts, and corporate cronyism. Either you are too stupid to realize it, or you think that your readers are.
^Well said.
The writer in an otherwise good piece fails to mention the trade deal Biden negotiated with Pacific rim and south Asian countries recently.
"TOKYO — President Biden has enlisted a dozen Asia-Pacific nations to join a new loosely defined economic bloc meant to counter China’s dominance and reassert American influence in the region five years after his predecessor withdrew the United States from a sweeping trade accord that it had negotiated itself. The alliance will bring the United States together with such regional powerhouses as Japan, South Korea and India to establish new rules of commerce in the fastest-growing part of the world and offer an alternative to Beijing’s leadership. .."
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/05/23/world/asia/biden-asian-pacific-bloc.html
Good god, you're gullible. Biden hasn't negotiated any trade deals; he has started talks on "IPEF" and those talks are going to take more than a year.
And the subject matter of the negotiations is mainly the imposition of new regulations and crony capitalist handouts to favorite industries. This is shaping up to be even worse than the trade deal Trump killed.
Yeah NYOB, I guess Japan, S Korea, and India among others are gullible too. "Talks" are negotiating and the successor to the TPP Obama negotiated - the CPTPP - is a successful enough that both the UK and now China want to join. Meanwhile our farmers among others lost markets in Japan, etc thanks to Donnie Fatso's stupid withdrawal. The king of debt and bankruptcy couldn't swing deals, he only broke them.
The IPEF is in early rounds, but it is a serious effort to not surrender those markets to Chinese hegemony, and do it with rules on labor and environmental impact. Too bad we lost 4 years on our 1st attempt which the rest of the world is competing to join.
ok hunter ........... go back to your paint by numbers board ..... or your parmesan cheese hunt
Free-Trade for those Communist countries......
80% Tax for U.S. Citizens??????
It's one thing to talk about free-trade specifically; as-in embargo's.. It's another thing to play **FAVORITISM** for other countries over one's own. Get all USA citizen's 'Tariffs' (i.e. Taxes) down to 15% and then y'all won't sound like such raging repeating hypocrites.
Japan, India, and S Korea are not communist countries.
author obviously has a big supply of kneepads handy ........