Marco Rubio Used To Know How Tariffs Work. What Happened?
The economics of tariffs have not changed in the past eight years. Marco Rubio has.

At a Republican presidential primary debate in January 2016, Sen. Marco Rubio (R–Fla.) succinctly explained why using tariffs as a foreign policy tool would backfire against Americans.
"We are all frustrated with what China is doing, but I think we need to be very careful with tariffs and here's why," Rubio said, directly challenging Donald Trump over his call for placing tariffs on goods imported from China.
"China doesn't pay the tariff. The buyer pays the tariff," Rubio explained. "If you send a tie or a shirt made in China into the United States, and an American goes to buy it in the store, and there is a tariff on it, [the tariff] gets passed on in the price to the consumer."
In an essay published this week at The American Conservative, Rubio argued for exactly the opposite. Trump's plan to place even more tariffs on China if elected to another term in the White House would be "good for the economy insofar as they counteract market inefficiencies created by adversarial trade practices," Rubio writes, adding that it will "prevent or reverse offshoring, preserving America's economic might and promoting domestic investment."
The economics of tariffs have not changed in the past eight years. Rubio has.
The once-independent-minded senator from Florida has recently gone all-in on nationalist economics—presumably in an attempt to flatter Trump, a man Rubio once called a "dangerous con man." The senator has authored other essays recently advocating for industrial policy (he supports the "right" kind of industrial policy, which would of course be very different from the wrong kind of industrial policy President Joe Biden is pursuing, even though it's unclear how they would actually differ) and has publicly pushed back at critics who have called out his economic fallacies.
But the current version of Rubio is bound to lose this debate with his 2016 alter ego, who has the facts firmly on his side.
Indeed, just as Rubio predicted in 2016, the tariffs imposed by former President Donald Trump have been overwhelmingly paid by American businesses and consumers. Those groups "bore nearly the full cost of these tariffs because import prices increased at the same rate as the tariffs," the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) found in its five-year review of Trump's tariff policies. While Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum spurred a small increase in domestic production of those metals, the ITC found, the downstream costs of the tariffs swamped the modest benefits.
Other studies found similar results. Here's one authored by economists at the Federal Reserve, Princeton University, and Columbia University that found Trump's tariffs cost U.S. consumers $3 billion per month. Here's a study by economists at the University of Chicago that found Trump's tariffs on washing machines hiked consumer costs by more than $1.5 billion. A study from Moody's Investor Service that found American consumers paid roughly 93 percent of the tariff costs. Other studies have come to similar conclusions.
In his American Conservative essay, Rubio tellingly doesn't attempt to offer evidence to contradict these well-established facts. Instead, he flippantly declares that the "'experts' got it wrong" and adds that "economists simplistically declare 'The policy is very bad. Tariffs make consumers poorer. They shrink the economy.'"
Perhaps the economists say those things because they are true and because the past six years have confirmed as much. It's fine to be skeptical of experts, but Rubio is the one making simplistic declarations here.
And if tariffs were the solution to anything, wouldn't there be evidence to support that claim by now? Rubio is engaging in a rhetorical trick more commonly used by progressives by suggesting that the lack of evidence in favor of a government policy isn't indicative of failure but only means that it hasn't been tried hard enough. Conservatives used to roll their eyes at that tactic.
Perhaps Rubio will parlay all these mental gymnastics and pro-Trump sycophancy into a vice presidential nomination or some other plum gig. For now, however, he's provided a perfectly pathetic illustration of the current state of the Republican Party, which has abandoned principle and reality to swoon for Trump's silly notions about what makes countries prosperous.
"The best thing we can do to protect ourselves against China economically is to make our economy stronger," Rubio said during that same GOP primary debate in 2016, adding that the best way to boost economic growth would be to cut taxes on American businesses and consumers.
Eight years later, Rubio is advocating for raising taxes on Americans in order to combat China. It makes no sense and we know that Rubio knows better, even if he no longer has the cojones to say so.
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Why do we have an article on what Rubio thinks (he has no real power) and not what Biden is doing with tariffs? The President is ready to announce a new round of tariffs on Chinese goods - from EV's to health equipment. WSJ is reporting on it. Barron's is reporting on it. Reuters is reporting on it.
But not a libertarian website.
They are choosing to write about a meaningless congressman.
...who is allegedly on Trump's short list for VP.
I don't believe Lil' Marco can grovel like the Down-Lo Bro has.
Since by Buttplug rhetoric all black Republicans are lawn jockeys, what a Hispanic?
Nobody has told the writers that congress gave the power to levy tariffs to the executive branch.
They're still operating by the old rules, so give them 5 years. They lag extra far behind everyone else.
Sad how Reason ignores Biden's tariffs.
https://reason.com/2024/04/17/bidens-call-for-more-steel-tariffs-is-economically-ineffective-political-pandering/
So sad.
https://reason.com/podcast/2024/04/01/trumps-and-bidens-terrible-tariffs/
They never talk about it at all.
https://reason.com/2024/03/21/opposition-to-u-s-steel-sale-shows-how-similar-biden-and-trump-are-on-trade/
The tariffs are the single most offensive thing about the Biden Administration.
No.
Nobody cares about Marco Rubio.
The idea is to make Chinese products cost more so consumers buy less of them and instead buy overpriced products made in the U.S. or a more friendly trade nation.
I mean, it probably won't work of course so there is that.
Ultimately it would be far wiser to simply ban trade with China entirely, but there is little incentive to do so since then America would need to fully face the nightmare economy we actually have instead of the internationally subsidized one we currently enjoy.
It's unfortunate that America has priced itself out of the labor market, but ultimately that's what Corporatism has wrought. I'd be highly suspicious of anyone with a 'plan' to fix that, since ultimately I'm pretty sure we crossed the Rubicon on that a long time ago. At this point it really is mutually assured economic destruction, and any plan that doesn't involve a timeline of a decade plus is almost certainly blowing smoke.
This is, of course, merely my opinion.
Ultimately it would be far wiser to simply ban trade with China entirely
When a foreign nation imposes a trade embargo by not allowing people of another nation engage in trade, it is an act of war.
When a government imposes a trade embargo on its own people by not allowing them to engage in trade, it is an act of benevolence.
The difference is only in who does it, but that’s the only difference that matters.
Just like Trump tariffs became bad when Biden took the White House, and will become good again if Trump wins.
Principals, not principles.
"Trump tariffs became bad when Biden took the White House, and will become good again if Trump wins."
Watch Trump suddenly become a born again free trader just because Biden has become a protectionist. And the Trump Cult will turn 189 degrees on a dime.
Trump is a businessman, and such a UGE fan of tariffs and subsidies. No way he'll become a free trader.
(he supports the "right" kind of industrial policy, which would of course be very different from the wrong kind of industrial policy President Joe Biden is pursuing, even though it's unclear how they would actually differ)
They would differ in the most important way - who is doing it. Because that's all that matters. Principals, not principles.
What happened?
MAGA happened. MAGA causes a person to wear purple sneakers and drink the cult leader's Kool-Aid.
Not to mention, to "don" the orange kneepads...
Indeed, just as Rubio predicted in 2016, the tariffs imposed by former President Donald Trump have been overwhelmingly paid by American businesses and consumers. Those groups "bore nearly the full cost of these tariffs because import prices increased at the same rate as the tariffs," the U.S. International Trade Commission (ITC) found in its five-year review of Trump's tariff policies. While Trump's tariffs on steel and aluminum spurred a small increase in domestic production of those metals, the ITC found, the downstream costs of the tariffs swamped the modest benefits.
It would sure be nice if we got an argument more to the point about how the increased costs aren't enough to pivot manufacturing back to the US instead of just complaining about the increased costs.
I've said this before, and I'll say it one last time: Increased costs is what tariffs are supposed to achieve. It's the increased costs that are (in theory) the incentive to return manufacturing to the country of import. Whether they work or not is certainly a worthwhile discussion. But complaining that a controlled burn causes stuff to catch on fire is not a useful arguments against controlled burns.
Reason is pro-corporate freedom, so anything that threatens their ability to do anything is bad.
Tariffs are even worse for personal economic freedom!
It’s the increased costs that are (in theory) the incentive to return manufacturing to the country of import.
You say that as if there is no manufacturing in this country. That's just not factually true. There's more manufacturing than ever. What has declined is the number of people required per unit of output, thanks to capital investments. Same as with farming, which employed 30% of the population a century ago, but a mere 2% today. Would you say we don't have any farms because we have fewer farmers? No? So why do you say that about manufacturing?
....
I don’t know what game-of-whackbat statistics one could pull out of a late-stage Empire State Manufacturing Index Report to “prove” that there’s “more” manufacturing in this country than ever before… but one reason I suspect it to be false is that I work in manufacturing… a multi-billion dollar multinational. And nearly zero of our manufacturing is done stateside. About 99% is done in China and Mexico, a little done in Canada (an outfit my company bought who kept it in Canada because “made in Canada” is quite culturally important north of the social construct), a teeny bit in Manchester, UK, and a moderate chunk in Malta– which is subsidized by the government to keep manufacturing in Malta and ultimate help Make Malta Great Again.
All of our competitors ALSO manufacture exclusively in China with a fair amount pivoting to Mexico because manufacturing in North america is turning out to be cheaper and logistically easier than China because of China’s increasing restrictions on internet/travel and their own byzantine rules that are getting more and more difficult to navigate as China increasingly moves to protect its domestic manufacturing.
So yeah, sure, there’s a metal shop still operating on the corner in North Platte, but yet I’m still stepping over homeless tents as far as the Ojos can see.
The article is about tariffs.
"Trump's plan to place even more tariffs on China if elected to another term in the White House would be "good for the economy insofar as they counteract market inefficiencies created by adversarial trade practices," Rubio writes, adding that it will "prevent or reverse offshoring, preserving America's economic might and promoting domestic investment.""
None of which has been historically true. Maybe the problem was we just didn't try hard enough?
The article is about tariffs.
The stated excuse for the tariffs is that we don't make anything anymore, so if we raise the price of imports enough then we'll start making the stuff here.
These people truly believe that the path to prosperity is to ignore economic concepts like comparative advantage, to bring back low-skilled (low-pay) manufacturing jobs, pay more taxes, use those taxes to subsidize industries that can't compete, prevent access to inexpensive goods, and generally lower everyone's standard of living.
Trump is a blithering idiot regarding economics and both Rubio and Biden are now imitating him.
https://www.cato.org/blog/united-states-remains-manufacturing-powerhouse
Beyond our everyday shopping experiences, perceptions of US manufacturing decline may also be due to the declining number of Americans who work in factories. From a peak of 19.5 million workers in 1979—22 percent of the nonfarm workforce—manufacturing employment has dropped to approximately 13 million today and just 8.3 percent of nonfarm workers. But employment is not the same as output—far from it. While manufacturing employment has declined by about one‐third, output is only slightly off its record high. Manufacturing’s value‐added, meanwhile, last year stood at an all‐time high.
I suppose it depends on how you define manufacturing. If you don't count things like airplanes, construction equipment, and medical devices as manufactured items, then yeah. We don't make anything.
Also automobiles, trucks, electronic equipment, munitions, and consumable consumer products (food and non food).
I work for the US subsidiary of a German firm, we manufacture stampings for the Americas. As in actually manufacture them, because we make high precision parts that cheap countries can't pull off. Parts of fuel injectors, for instance, or the solenoid valves running your automatic transmission. We specialize in parts most companies can't do.
But we DO have increasing trouble locally sourcing stainless steel coils, because less and less of the good grades are made in the US thanks, I suspect, to our policy of outsourcing emissions so we can pretend we've reduced them.
Correct.
Both Biden and Trump long for the Jurassic period when unskilled uneducated workers could get well paying factory jobs that would last for decades.
Hillary Clinton had the courage to say that those days are long gone and that helped lose her the election.
Meanwhile the tariff proponents whine about the inflation that the tariffs are designed to cause.
It would be sad if powerful politicians could not learn from experience and change their positions based on new information. Having said that, it is even more sad that powerful politicians change their positions based solely upon holding their fingers in the air to test which way the political winds are blowing at the moment.
What has changed?
I suppose what's changed is that everybody who isn't willfully blind is now aware that China isn't just an economic competitor, they're a military foe. And nations do not voluntarily remain economically dependent on trade with hostile powers.
The tariffs aren't an economic measure, they're a military measure. They're an attempt to accelerate our disentanglement from China, so that when, not if, we end up at war with them, the damage to our industrial capacity is minimized.
Did Reason sleep through that revelation?
I find your worthless sabre-rattling disturbing. First of all, China has been a military foe since the became Communist and started threating to reclaim Formosa. Second of all it's not a revelation to anyone but the strawmen you're trying to set up. Thirdly, it doesn't make any difference to whether tariffs are or are not a good idea - in the case of China specifically, the world in general - because economic policy should not hinge on military posture EVER because that trick NEVER works. Only war hawks such as yourself think so or pretend to think so.
Russia really did invade Ukraine and BRICS really does exist. China supports Russia. The chatter is also on the Socialist World Web.
https://www.foxnews.com/world/us-intelligence-finding-shows-china-surging-equipment-sales-russia-help-war-effort-ukraine
You're saying China was a threat when the country was living in the middle ages and was almost entirely agrarian? Huh...seems like bullshit to me. How did they plan to invade the United States back then? Steam ships?
Now they are a threat, certainly, since they've had decades to steal technology and build up their military. They even stole plans for how to make nuclear weapons, making them a nuclear threat in the modern age.
Cool, so glad we opened up trade to such dishonest partners. It's a great way to run a country...assuming you need to find somewhere else to make all your cheap widgets since you priced your country out of the running.
Good to know some people are still really proud of Nixons legacy, though. You aren't the only one, it would seem.
The Communist Peoples Republic of China became a military threat to the rest of the world in 1949. If you want to try to claim that that year was "the middle ages" go right ahead. Meanwhile those of us living in the real world know that whatever military threat China might pose to the United States of America has not changed significantly since 1949. Libertarians prefer free markets for a very good reason: threats like Russia and China are less likely to attack trading partners who are making them rich than they are to attack powerful rivals that try to impose sanctions on them and limit their access to resources. Although it doesn't always work it seems like a reasonable principle (see "modified tit-for-tat" game theory) for the United States to follow. Russia attacking Ukraine is not the same thing as Russia attacking the United States; and China's "support" for the Russian invasion of Ukraine (whatever support might mean in that context) does not change that. Imposing sanctions on Russia doesn't seem to have slowed down the war in Ukraine at all; and tariffs on China did not impact the military threat to the United States as far as I can tell except, possibly, to heighten tensions.
Middle ages as in that's how the vast majority of their population lived, and no they were not suddenly an actual threat in the aftermath of Mao. It took years for that.
It appears to have also escaped Marco Rubio and Donald Trump.
Surely, they wouldn't be lying to the American people about their true motivations?
Everyone knows how tariffs work. That's the point of tariffs, making foreign products more expensive so domestic ones become competitive.
What has changed (not really, but he's presumably more aware of it) is that we are inching towards a war with China over Taiwan.
We've devastated our economy is some many sectors and made China rich, at the price of cheap poorly made products.
Everyone knows how tariffs work.
That’s not true. Ask the average Trump supporter about tariffs "on China", and they’ll tell you that China pays them. I went through that dozens of times while Trump was president and his defenders were defending his tariffs. Though in retrospect they were defending him, or else they’d credit Biden for continuing his policies.
We are not now, nor have we ever been, "inching" towards war with China over Taiwan. Tariffs have nothing whatever to do with defending America against military attack and, if anything, would make war MORE likely not less likely.
Correct. China will be much more willing to start a war once we have stopped buying their products.
But Trump wants to start a war with Mexico first.
Lol. The last “aid package” sent billions to Ukraine, Israel, and…… Taiwan? Did they even ask for help?
“Inching towards war” seems accurate here. Might not happen. Hope not. Our leaders seem content with just funding other peoples wars for now, but dismissing it out of hand seems Pollyanna-ish.
Kinda like “importing mass poverty is a good idea!” Haha.
"Inching" by what measure? "Inching" according to what criteria? China has threatened to invade Taiwan many times since 1949 and never tried. They either launch an invasion which might or might not trigger a military response by the United States; or they do NOT launch an invasion. It's kind of an all or nothing thing. You don't know whether we were "inching" towards war until the war starts. Were the Ukraine and Russia "inching" towards war before Russia invaded the Crimea in 2014?
Fatass Americans would rather not cut calories from their diet, better to blame others and demand others accommodate their obesity.
Same thing here. Getting rid of 50% of labor laws and other regulations would solve a majority of America's competitive advantage issues.
^BINGO.
Politicians cater to their voters. For whatever reason, laborers have decided that high paying manufacturing jobs or protectionism is what they want, combined with child tax credits or a UBI and mandates (on the Democrat side) for the products they produce, bans on the products they do not produce. Nowthe left and right are joining forces on credit cards, unions and “Big Box” retailers/grocery. The energy mandates are messing with land markets as farms turn into solar fields. Who needs food, dammit!
Standard mafia state crap. Horseshoe theory
The end times, basically!
Child tax credits were a Republican idea. But now that Democrats support them, Republicans oppose them.
The Constitution was supposed to limit the extent to which politicians are allowed to cater to their voters. The politicians managed to blow right past those limitations in less than a century after implementing the national income tax, and now there is nothing whatever stopping them besides a few libertarians whose warnings are being ignored. The only possible way at this point to slow them down would be to implement proportional representation in the state legislatures and Congress to allow third parties to be represented by more than the “lesser of two evils.”
"the best way to boost economic growth would be to cut taxes on American businesses and consumers"
Indeed. So why is Reason trying to give China production 0% taxes and playing never-mind to the 50%+ on domestic? Once upon a time there wasn't any federal income tax and government was entirely funded by tariffs. As the 'National' defense government concerning international affairs why wouldn't their funding come from international markets?
These complaints about tariffs-only are nothing but trying to entitle foreign markets in this environment where foreign markets are already entitled. Good grief it wasn't that long ago taxpayers were actually subsidizing (taxpayers were paying) imported goods by the UPU agreement. China is no longer a 'slum'. There isn't even a sympathy factor left to give them special treatment and special treatment (0%-taxable) is all Reason wants to complain about while they pretty much totally ignore the 50%+ domestic is paying.
It doesn’t take a genius to figure the ROI on slave/unfree labor. OTOH, the U.S. and EU make up only ~15 percent of consumers. IMO it’s an economic growth conundrum.
Agree with you on domestic taxes.