Trade Wars: Who Wins, Who Loses?
USAMon Oct 28 2024
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Tariffs can really slow down economic growth, making a country less rich than it could be. Free trade helps boost wealth by letting nations make things they're best at. The U. S. excels at making advanced planes, like those from Boeing, and high-tech chips, like ones made by Nvidia. Plus, it's cheap for them to produce oil and gas. This lets the U. S. focus its resources on these areas, making everyone better off.
Tariffs on simple goods, like clothes or appliances, don't help. The U. S. isn't good at making these things cheaply. So, imposing tariffs on them just makes products more expensive for Americans. It's like asking a country that's great at baking pies to start making shoes instead. Doesn't make sense, right?
Both former President Trump and current President Biden have used tariffs to win votes, but this hurts everyone. Even if the U. S. is better at making everything, it shouldn't waste resources on stuff it's not best at.
Sometimes, safety matters more than money. So, tariffs on China might make sense. Being Friends with China makes it stronger, and that could be risky for the U. S.
But using these same security rules on allies like Canada and Europe is a bad idea. It hurts U. S. businesses, like Caterpillar and Deere, by making their costs go up. No one wants that. Even if a friend does something unfair, there are better ways to handle it than tariffs.
Free trade isn't free if someone's cheating. There are rules for that too. But tariffs on a few workers' jobs help just a few people while making everyone else poorer. People might like tariffs, but they'll be worse off in the end.