• About Smart Again
  • Contact
Smart Again
  • Login
  • (REAL) NEWS
  • POLITICS
    • OPINION
    • SATIRE
  • DEMOCRACY
  • EQUALITY AND JUSTICE
  • SCIENCE
    • ENVIRONMENT
  • COVID
  • VIDEO
  • (REAL) NEWS
  • POLITICS
    • OPINION
    • SATIRE
  • DEMOCRACY
  • EQUALITY AND JUSTICE
  • SCIENCE
    • ENVIRONMENT
  • COVID
  • VIDEO
No Result
View All Result
Smart Again
No Result
View All Result
Home (REAL) NEWS

Going Soft on China Will Not Reduce Inflation

by Robert Kuttner
December 21, 2021
in (REAL) NEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

The Biden administration is understandably eager both to reduce inflation and to demonstrate to the public that it is doing all that it can. Some actions that the administration has taken are good economics and smart politicsfor instance, getting serious about the supply chain mess; directing the FTC to look into price manipulation in the oil industry and its futures markets; and using antitrust powers generally to crack down on economic concentration and opportunistic price-gouging.

But here is a really bad idea that some in the administration are pushing: cut some of the tariffs on China. For starters, these tariffs are key leverage in a long-term Biden strategy of pushing back on Chinas extralegal mercantilism that has been so harmful to U.S. industry. Any unilateral disarmament on this front makes no sense. Despite the tariffs, Chinas trade surplus with the U.S. has continued to grow.

More from Robert Kuttner

Secondly, the idea that cutting tariffs on Chinese imports would make any serious dent in the current inflation is wishful economics and foolish politics. Here are the numbers.

The tariffs total less than $80 billion a year, in a $21 trillion economy, and some of the costs are absorbed by U.S. companies. So even if the administration ended all of the tariffswhich nobody is proposingthat would be one-third of 1 percent of GDP. The actual proposed cuts are described as surgical, or less than one-tenth of 1 percent of GDP. This would have no real effect on inflation, and Biden would be ridiculed if he tried to spin cutting China tariffs as anti-inflation.

Yet his Treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, has been promoting this idea. In a July interview with The New York Times, oblivious to Bidens larger China policy, Yellen said flatly, Tariffs are taxes on consumers. In some cases it seems to me what we did hurt American consumers, and the type of deal that the prior administration negotiated really didnt address in many ways the fundamental problems we have with China.

Former Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, part of the old regime that so bungled U.S. China policy, has added his voice to this claim. He told CNBC: Ive thought from the beginning that the tariffs were an ineffective way to deal with [Chinas] attacks on American consumers. And right now, with inflation being an issue, rolling back tariffs would actually reduce inflation in the United States.

It is highly improbable that Lew would have gone public without checking with the current Treasury secretary and getting Yellens blessing.

The Biden advisers pushing this dubious idea are doing him no favor.

Source: The American Prospect

Recommended

Guillermo del Toro’s Nightmare Alley Is Lurid, Violent, and Boring

War With Russia Over Ukraine ‘Last Thing’ US Needs, Say Progressives

Connect with us

Newsletter

Sign up now to get breaking news delivered to your inbox.

JOIN US

Category

  • (REAL) NEWS
  • COVID
  • DEMOCRACY
  • ENVIRONMENT
  • EQUALITY AND JUSTICE
  • OPINION
  • POLITICS
  • SATIRE
  • SCIENCE

Site Links

  • Log in
  • Entries feed
  • Comments feed
  • WordPress.org

About Us

We bring you the smartest curated content for reality-based America.

  • About Smart Again
  • Contact

© 2021 SmartAgain.org - The Smartest Curated Content For Reality-Based America

No Result
View All Result
  • (REAL) NEWS
  • POLITICS
    • OPINION
    • SATIRE
  • DEMOCRACY
  • EQUALITY AND JUSTICE
  • SCIENCE
    • ENVIRONMENT
  • COVID
  • VIDEO

© 2021 SmartAgain.org - The Smartest Curated Content For Reality-Based America

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In