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International News Title: Trump’s Got It Right on Trade Donald Trump has been savaged by economists and the media aligned with establishment candidates for tough positions on tradeincluding a 45 percent tariff on imports to force China to the negotiating table. Actually, hes got it right. Establishment Democrats and Republicans embrace free trade because it puts free markets first with benefits any decently trained economist should extoll. Unfortunately, trade with China and many nations is hardly market- driven. It hurts U.S. growth and victimizes Americas families. Obamas six-year expansion has averaged 2.2 percent annual economic growth and added 13.6 million jobs. Coming off a similar bout with double-digit unemployment, Reagan delivered 4.6 percent growth and, in a smaller economy, added 18.1 million jobs. Now conditions in China threaten to derail the U.S. recovery. Beijings statisticians report Chinas growth slowed to 6.9 percent in 2015, down from double digits a few years ago. Western estimates are as low as 4 percent, and much of that is decadent. Building apartments and office complexes that attract no tenants, and entire ghost cities, count in Chinas GDP tally but add little to productivity. Wasteful outlays have boosted debt to 260 percent of GDP. Nervous about a looming credit crisis, Chinese investors are heading for the doorsselling yuan for dollars to invest in overseas real estate and securities. This panics global stock markets and pushes down the yuan against the dollarmaking Chinese goods artificially more price competitive against American-made products than underlying costs warrant. For all the talk of a faltering dragon, U.S. imports from China were up, exports down, and the bilateral trade deficit increased nearly $25 billion in 2015killing 200,000 American jobs. Crippling debt is epidemic among emerging economies, as many borrowed in a mad race to expand manufacturing. Like Japan and the European Union, they now seek to cope with excess capacity and crushing interest payments by cheapening their currencies to juice exports and ship unemployment to America. Those strategies have pushed U.S. manufacturing into recessionemployment in export-focused durable goods is down 35,000 since June. Trade should work better for America. We have a highly productive workforce and generate most of the worlds cutting edge innovations, but commerce doesnt happen in a vacuum. Governments put up tariffs, impose tough regulations on foreign goods and investment, and offer businesses subsidies to export more. Thats why American automobile and electronics manufacturers locate in China, and the same goes in other Asian venues. How tough conditions are for U.S.-based industry is strongly determined by international trade agreementsthose administered by the World Trade Organization and deals struck with individual countries. The Obama Administration heralded the U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement as creating countless new opportunities for U.S. exporters to sell more Made- in-America goods, services and agricultural products to Korean customers and to support more good jobs here at home. Since implemented in 2012, imports from Korea have risen much more than exports, and the bilateral trade deficit is up about $16 billiondestroying 130,000 good-paying American jobs. Now the Obama Administration is making similarly fanciful claims to win congressional approval for a Trans-Pacific Partnership . It would establish free trade with 11 other nations, including Japan, without cleaning up subsidies and currency manipulation. Overall, the U.S. trade deficit exceeds $500 billion a year and kills about 4 million jobs. Lost manufacturing takes a big bite out of R&D spending and that goes a long way toward explaining why growth is so disappointing and median family incomes are down $4000 since 2000. Trumps proposals for fixing tradestarting with Chinaaddress the salient issues of currency, trade barriers and subsidies. Those echo Mitt Romneys 2012 platformand candidate Obama in 2008but threaten entrenched interests in both the Republican and Democratic parties. Trump is hardly reckless on tradejust a long needed agent for change. Poster Comment: When it comes to trade China sees us as a paper tiger, all roar and no bite. So far they've been right; but with Trump they'll learn about American claws and teeth. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 9.
#4. To: nativist nationalist (#0)
I just came back from the local drug store where I bought a digital thermometer. Every one that was available was made in China.
Everything comes from China who do you think gave them the designs you wanted cheap you got it the poor can now afford it
And they'll stay poor because the jobs making these and thousands of other items have been shipped out of the country.
let me try to enlighten you an enormous task indeed. Some 20-30 years ago my nation found itself in this situation, industries vanishing, traditional work disappearing but we restructured, very painful, today we have low unemployment, traditional jobs have gone and there is a lot of part time employment but generally unemployment is low. The USA has to respond to the new reality, they created an industrial revolution of robotics and free trade and now they have to find employment for those left behind. We all like local manufacture, look with pride on local product, but be realistic we need to focus on different industries. can you tell me there isn't a huge task on cleaning up environmental messes? on renewing inferstructure. It might take change in government structure to get it done, The numbers of our local governments are shrinking, efficiency becomes important, local representation less so. Governments become more accountable
Sure. But wouldn't you also agree that potential employees need to graduate high school with the ability to read, write, and do basic math? To have a work ethic? To stay out of trouble with the law, be honest and be drug-free? Given those requirements, I've probably eliminated half the potential workforce. Let's not put this all on the employers.
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