Center for Business and Economic Research - Ball State University


CBER Data Center
Projects and PublicationsEconomic IndicatorsWeekly CommentaryCommunity Asset InventoryManufacturing Scorecard

About

Commentaries are published weekly and distributed through the Indianapolis Business Journal and many other print and online publications. Disclaimer

RSS Feed

Disclaimer

The views expressed in these commentaries do not reflect those of Ball State University or the Center for Business and Economic Research.

Recent

Two Key Economic Lessons in One BillHoosiers face trade-offs and opportunity costs in the wake of SEA1.

Time to Fix Economic Development PolicyAllocating tax dollars to land development won’t cause economic growth.

The Unanticipated Effects of SB1Businesses, governments and households may all feel the effects.

The Stupidest of PoliciesThis whipsawing of tariff rates has unnerved financial markets, which on Wednesday, were toying with a liquidity crisis.

View archives

Top Tags

jobs and employment 261
economics 201
state and local government 188
education 186
economic development 171
indiana 171
budget and spending 145
taxes 144
law and public policy 142
workforce and human capital 139
Browse all tags
Reporter / Admin Login

September 21, 2009

Chinese Tariffs Missteps toward Trade Wars

Just a short year ago economists of all stripes voiced fears of a rise in economic protectionism like that which contributed mightily to the Great Depression. Thankfully, cooler heads have prevailed and the worldwide recession now eases.

President Obama’s decision to levy a tariff on Chinese tires marks a troubling departure from that one area of economic serenity. By making the announcement late on a Friday evening the President surely hoped to miss another catastrophic news cycle of the likes that has plagued him for weeks. By levying the tariff on a small industry he sought to bolster flagging domestic support with a dose of 19th century protectionism. It is pure politics of the rankest sort.

Let me be clear that this foolishness has long bipartisan roots. George W. Bush was also guilty of protectionism with steel tariffs. The industry was far larger, but we were not then in the grips of a global recession. Thankfully, Mr. Bush learned one lesson at least and did not repeat the mistake, but in this matter both men failed their country alike.

Surprisingly, in light of this policy misstep, Mr. Obama is well blessed with an economic team who understands the need for free trade. His economists and supporters – especially Paul Krugman – are strangely silent on an issue upon which they built their reputation. Indeed Dr. Krugman was elevated from tweedy professor to nationally syndicated columnist based on a popular book castigating the Clinton administration for far smaller lapses in judgment.

The President’s choice of timing is suspect for another reason. Coming as it did while Indiana Governor Mitch Daniels was in Asia on a highly publicized trade mission raises new questions. Is the President willing to spawn a trade war and dampen foreign investment in order to weaken a potential rival in the 2012 elections? Let us pray it is merely ineptitude at the White House.

In times gone by the Chinese would simply respond by raising the tariff on U.S. tires. Those days are past. Recognizing that trade wars are purely political the Chinese have retaliated with astute political choices. The first victims are poultry producers. Tyson – a huge chicken producer and long time Clinton financier – are about to feel abrupt pain at China’s partial exclusion of U.S. imports. If Mrs. Clinton ever again condescends to step foot in Arkansas, Tyson might bend her ear on the matter.

The Midwest needs to worry too. We produce chicken and pork. These huge exports to China represent items we just might be anxious to sell to the world’s fastest growing economy. Our largest exports to China also include electrical supply parts, aerospace parts, medical equipment and supplies. General Electric is another close friend of the Obama administration likely to feel the heat from Chinese reprisals.

No matter what you think of President Obama’s policies, his cool demeanor and earnestness commands respect. The fumbling antics of protectionism do not. This is the first shot in a trade war not of necessity, but of choice.

Link to this commentary: https://commentaries.cberdata.org/46/chinese-tariffs-missteps-toward-trade-wars

Tags: trade


About the Author

Michael Hicks cberdirector@bsu.edu

Michael J. Hicks, PhD, is the director of the Center for Business and Economic Research and the George and Frances Ball distinguished professor of economics in the Miller College of Business at Ball State University. Note: The views expressed here are solely those of the author, and do not represent those of funders, associations, any entity of Ball State University, or its governing body.

© Center for Business and Economic Research, Ball State University

About Ball State CBER Data Center

Ball State CBER Data Center is one-stop shop for economic data including demographics, education, health, and social capital. Our easy-to-use, visual web tools offer data collection and analysis for grant writers, economic developers, policy makers, and the general public.

Ball State CBER Data Center (cberdata.org) is a product of the Center for Business and Economic Research at Ball State University. CBER's mission is to conduct relevant and timely public policy research on a wide range of economic issues affecting the state and nation. Learn more.

Terms of Service

Center for Business and Economic Research

Ball State University • Whitinger Business Building, room 149
2000 W. University Ave.
Muncie, IN 47306-0360
Phone:
765-285-5926
Email:
cber@bsu.edu
Website:
www.bsu.edu/cber
Facebook:
www.facebook.com/BallStateCBER
Twitter:
www.twitter.com/BallStateCBER
Close