Banning Chinese Products in the Name of 'National Security' Could Have Disastrous Consequences
It would result in shortages, decreases in productivity, and higher production costs affecting millions of American workers and nearly every consumer.

The controversy over proposed state and federal bans of Chinese-produced apps has sparked debate about the wisdom of country-of-origin bans in general. On the surface, banning TikTok and other controversial products coming from China appears reasonable. But the deeper you dig, the less these ideas make sense.
This is especially true when bans are based on national security concerns and talked about in the context of "decoupling" our economy from China's. National security is important, of course, but abusing this argument to blindly close off America to Chinese imports may isolate us in ways that could weaken our security. This is true even if one agrees that China engages in forced technology transfer, forced labor, and other terrible behaviors.
National security is an elusive concept. Politicians have long understood the potency of waving the national security flag to push policies, even if unrelated to national security. Since the cost of government meddling in the economy is often large (even when used to achieve legit security goals), the burden of proof should be put squarely on the shoulders of those advocating for blanket or targeted bans.
Yet, that's rarely the case. Leaving aside whether it's even possible to partially or fully decouple from Chinese products, calls to isolate the U.S. economy are concerning. First, decoupling would carry some often-overlooked security risks. Global trade can, at the margin, increase national security by interlocking economies and discouraging armed conflict.
Furthermore, a country that grows is more politically stable and resilient and has revenue to invest in national security. Taking steps toward decoupling requires isolationist policies like tariffs, export and import bans, and sanctions—growth killers in both countries with important destabilizing effects.
Therefore, if we're using an expansive definition of national security, we can't ignore the ramifications of harming the world's largest economies and severing any relatively liberalizing connections between them.
If the government ordered large-scale bans of Chinese outputs, it would practically require U.S. companies with some operations in China to move out. Listening to sound bites, you might think these companies can pick up and go with no major economic impact. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Shifting production back home or to other countries is a long and expensive process. For instance, it's projected to take Apple, which decided to leave China in response to its COVID-19 policies, until 2025 or 2026 to shift its vast iPhone assembly processes to India or Vietnam. Some estimates are more pessimistic, saying it would take eight years to shift only 10 percent of production out of China.
On a larger scale, these policies would result in shortages, decreases in productivity, and higher production costs affecting millions of American workers and nearly every consumer.
That's the direction the newly released RESTRICT Act, sponsored by Sens. Mark Warner (D–Va.) and John Thune (R–S.D.) would take us in by empowering government officials to ban communications and technology transactions that these unaccountable bureaucrats deem a threat to national security. We should always be worried about delegating so much power to unelected officials, and we should be particularly concerned in today's isolationist moment.
Besides, if Trump-era steel tariffs—imposed for alleged national security reasons—are our guide, then expect more protectionism in disguise. These trade restrictions, at best, do nothing for national security but do raise prices for American consumers.
In response to U.S. government-orchestrated bans, we can expect the Chinese government to kick out American companies at great cost to both these firms and our own economy. KFC, GM, Microsoft, Boeing, Nike, Coca-Cola, Procter & Gamble, Intel, Starbucks, and Apple are just a few companies that sell significant percentages of their products to Chinese citizens. Making it harder for American companies to earn profits and to expand isn't the smartest move in the current economic environment.
Ironically, any step to ban Chinese products would significantly affect military families. Indeed, half of the products in retail stores run by the military (exchanges) for its personnel are made in China. A ban on the sale of Chinese-made products in military exchanges and commissaries, such as the one approved in June 2022 by the House Armed Services Committee, would be devastating to military families who heavily rely on exchanges. This "feel good" policy would leave the shelves of U.S. military commissaries empty or stocked with pricier goods.
These are only a handful of the overlooked costs of country-of-origin bans. While they make for great sound bites, we should be highly skeptical of them, even when the argument is made in the name of national security.
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Ignoring reality to stick to bumper sticker beliefs that nobody acts as a bad actor is often more dangerous.
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/10/04/chinese-spy-chips-are-said-to-be-found-in-hardware-used-by-apple-amazon-apple-denies-the-bloomberg-businessweek-report.html
Another example.
https://cyberscoop.com/android-malware-china-huawei-zte-kryptowire-blu-products/
As long as china's government has a big say in the products they export, there is a risk. We aren't talking about a nation of independent manufacturers. Youre just being naive.
And it isnt just China. But has also effected Australia and other companies exports.
https://www.zdnet.com/article/atlassian-says-encryption-busting-law-has-damaged-australias-tech-reputation/
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Oddly Reason seems knowledgeable about these acts when done by the US but seems to always ignore it for countries like China.
https://reason.com/2015/07/15/the-fbi-wants-the-key-to-your-data/
And
https://reason.com/2020/01/14/the-fbi-wants-access-to-a-mass-shooters-iphone-will-they-demand-a-backdoor/
Is this due to your bosses?
China is a belligerent communist dictatorship with a stated goal of world domination. And they specifically single out the US as their main adversary. It seems foolish of the US to continue funding this malign enemy.
There's your mistake.
Globalists don't view the CCP as their enemy. They view *us* as their enemy.
Our Ruling Reptiles view the CCP as their model of governance and partner in imposing that model on us.
They get rich and American workers get crushed!
It's a win-win for the Ruling Reptiles!
And let's not pretend this is about Free Trade.
It's grotesque to suggest that trade with a slave state is part of a "free" market.
But even if Reason is fine with dealing with slavers, they're opposing the basics of free trade set out by Adam Smith.
He generally favored tariffs to protect industries for national security and to offset local taxes on production, and on deliberation as a negotiating tactic to lower foreign tariffs.
But tariffs to offset local taxes on production is key. That's what levels the playing field on foreign versus local production.
Why should we tax our neighbor's labor, or the goods he sells us from his labor, but not the goods from foreigners?
That's not free trade, that's biased trade favoring foreigners.
Wealth of Nations, pg. 355, 356, 359
https://ibiblio.org/ml/libri/s/SmithA_WealthNations_p.pdf
This article is another in a long line of Reason telling the world they're an ally of the CCP and an enemy of free people everywhere.
TikTok says it has worked to create a risk mitigation plan to ensure that U.S. data doesn’t get into the hands of a foreign adversary through its app. The company has said U.S. user data is already stored outside of China.
https://worldabcnews.com/tiktok-ceo-appeals-to-u-s-users-ahead-of-house-testimony/
Emily Baker-White disagrees.
The major issue with TikTok is NOT data security.
“Allowing TikTok, a Chinese company … to be the primary channel for the most important group of voters in the United States. Do you see any problem there?”
BTW, https://redstate.com/benkew/2023/03/23/watch-tiktok-ceo-refuses-to-answer-questions-about-chinas-uyghur-genocide-n720456
Meanwhile, domestic social media sites such as Twitter are infested with Russian bots.
Which is why there needs to be a standard across the board regardless of where the site is HQed.
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China has banned US Social Media apps, what shortages do they have? Attention Whores? Insolent teenagers?
China most certainly does have a shortage of Attention Whores & Insolent Teenagers. It's almost as if the CCP understand what creates them and prohibits those products.
The biggest argument for banning TikTok is it's banned in China. The version allowed in China has nothing to do with what's exported to the rest of the world. That version is an educational tool. The rest of the world get digital fentanyl.
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No one is trying to stop chinese products, the government is reviewing one social media product that is obviously a psyop from the chinese communist party. There is a lot of gray between "banning all chinese products" and "stopping a rogue psyop from China from infecting our kids".