That's all fine in your hypothetical world.gil wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 7:13 pmThe analogy is simplistic, but I don't think it's stupid. International trade really is just a special case of any stem of exchange. If Washington apples are sold in Texas, it's business as usual. If the apples are sold in British Columbia, it's international trade.XpertDBA wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 6:04 pmWhat a stupid analogy. Wouldn't the real situation be, that the US would have more food producers, cereal producers, and slaughterhouses to produce more food, cereal and meat domestically. This would increase exports of those items making our country more money, instead of relying on us importing those same items. Also, I would think the prices for American-made items would be cheaper, as they would avoid any tariffs at all. This also encourages global companies to consider building and producing here, increasing jobs in the U.S., instead of the other way around.gil wrote: ↑Tue Mar 18, 2025 2:15 pm
Do you think business profits are more important than lower prices? I don't.
And I want to emphasize that when prices are raised (due to a tariff/tax) it isn't just you or me as the final consumer who pays more. It's also the American businesses who make products and provide services using the imported item.
I've been having discussion with a couple of my more conservative friends who don't seem to really know how tariffs work. Their reaction is that if we (America) has a negative balance of trade, we are losing money. I disagree.
Consider this analogy: I go to the grocery store and buy a variety of things. The grocery store buys nothing for me. Literally, I have a negative balance of trade with the grocery. Is this bad? Should I stop "trading" with my grocer? (That was, should I just grow all my food, make my own breakfast cereal, slaughterhouse my own meat?)
Adam Smith wrote all about this in "The Wealth of Nations", published 249 years ago. Free trade is better than having tariffs. Specialization is better than doing everything yourself. Spend your efforts doing what you are best at, then buy the other things. These principles are the foundation of capitalism.
Propping up industries with tariffs and subsidies is state socialism. It might be justifiable in some very specific circumstances, but in general, it's not a good idea. It helps a few and hurts most of us, and the total harm is greater than the total gain.
How about this: Instead of an individual, let's say there is a home country that is resource-rich in almost everything, and is completely self-sufficient. No imports or exports. But if their neighboring county produces better food more cheaply, why not import some? The consumer gets cheaper food. The existing food producers can either [1] innovate and be more productive (i.e., do a better job completing with the imports), or [2] get out of food production and do something that has higher value. This seems like basic economics/capitalism to me.
So Canada doesn't tariff most products they import? Great, neither will the US.
But if they want to sell their cars here in a free market while our cars have a 25% tariff in their markets, well that's not exactly the same is it.