Tariffs – Is the Economy a Zero Sum Game? With Limited Good?

“Over 23% of all the goods and services made since 1AD were produced from 2001 to 2010.”

MP: It also looks like more economic output was produced in the 20th century than in the previous 19 centuries combined.

Prior to about 1650 in England, the concept of economic development (increasing per capita incomes) did not exist. People over the past several hundred thousand years hoped to survive and reproduce, but there could have been no thought that they or their progeny would somehow achieve or inherit a more productive lifestyle. The change from hunter-gatherer to slash & burn and later intensive farming took place over dozens of generations so that people were totally unaware of the changes taking place.

The Theory of “limited Good.”  It is fascinating in its explanation of why Capitalism comes under attack.  If we move away from this primitive concept that there is only “so much” to go around, and bring to bear the concept that  rather than limited wealth, there is unlimited potential for wealth, we may be able to end class warfare.

The term limited good is a concept from anthropology describing the theory commonly held in traditional societies, that there is a limited amount of “good” to go around. In other words, the amount of good luckmoney, etc. available is held to be finite, so every time one person profits, another loses. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limited_good

Bunkerville did a post on the topic in 2011 which included a thought provoking piece on “limited good” from The Logical Middle.  Here is a portion of the thought provoking piece. He goes on to talk about the economic explosion in the last centuries. The roadblocks for expansion of wealth.

Redistribution of accumulated wealth may be necessary to keep the peace in tribal and feudal villages. However, the social stigma against accumulation of wealth can be detrimental to economic development when a society is capable of increasing the level of per capita production. Unfortunately, the Theory of Limited Good continues to be a very powerful myth in modernizing societies, and is often the prevailing paradigm in countries just beginning the development process.

The term was coined by George M. Foster in his 1965 article, Peasant Society and the Image of Limited Good, “American Anthropologist.” The concept has been described by Allen as the rural counterpart of the culture of poverty. The Mexican peasants (in Tzintzuntzan, Michoacán) Foster studied were seen by him to lack interest in new opportunities because of their perception of the world as a “competitive game.” This led to a high level of distrust and envy and fragile and constantly shifting patterns of alignment. [1]  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limited_good  From 2000 years of History, a great time to live

The chart below is from The Economist and shows a “population-weighted history of the past two millennia” based on “economic output” and “years lived.”  According to The Economist:

Over 23% of all the goods and services made since 1AD were produced from 2001 to 2010.”

MP: It also looks like more economic output was produced in the 20th century than in the previous 19 centuries combined

Click on graph to enlarge.

Here is part of the piece on “limited good”   Logical Middle.

The amount of goods on this earth appeared to be strictly limited. One tribe could garner a larger amount of goods only by taking it away from some other tribe; one group or family in a community could improve their position only by appropriating resources from, or enslaving, other groups or families.

Feudal societies existed in Europe and Asia for centuries with no perceptible long-term change in the per capita level of living from generation to generation. The share of the population that was relatively well-off—mostly the nobility, military, priesthood, and a small cadre of artisans and tradesmen—was always limited to about ten percent of the total because it was not possible to extract a larger share of the food supply from the majority peasant farmer population through tribute or taxation.

Peasant farmers in feudal societies, and people in hunter-gatherer societies, had little incentive to produce more food than they could consume when there was very little of value that could be obtained for that food through trade. In feudal and tribal societies, the vast majority of people had no reason to even consider increasing production above that required to maintain life.

The amount of goods on this earth appeared to be strictly limited. One tribe could garner a larger amount of goods only by taking it away from some other tribe; one group or family in a community could improve their position only by appropriating resources from, or enslaving, other groups or families.
The absence of the possibility of increasing per capita production leads to the conclusion that one can consume more only when others consume less.

To have more, you must take from people who will necessarily have less. This view, or rather this reality, gave rise to the theory of limited good, that was the prevailing paradigm in feudal and primitive societies. If there is a limited amount of goods in this world it must follow that either all people will be poor, or a small share of the population can have relative wealth by further impoverishing the others.

But, objection to accumulation of wealth is not just pandering to persons who oppose the social and economic establishment.

Even among people who should know better, there is a nagging feeling that Bill Gates’ billions may be the reason hundreds of thousands of people live in poverty. Likewise, the large and successful businesses such as McDonalds and Wall Mart must be guilty of something—else they would not be so rich and successful.

Economic development—an increase in the per capita production and consumption of goods and services—is, for most of us, a mysterious process. How does new wealth come into existence? Where does it come from? How can it be true that we will all be better off if we rush out and spend our money on the silliness that Madison Avenue is pushing in TV commercials?

How can inadequate demand cause recession and poverty? Don’t recession and poverty prove that demand is already too high in comparison to the supply of goods and services? Doesn’t it make more sense to believe recession and poverty are caused by low productivity? And, doesn’t it make more sense to believe that if Bill Gates didn’t have so many billions of dollars, there would be more for the rest of us?

The story goes on with examples.

The bottom line is that we need to produce more goods to sell,  if simply intellectual goods,  and more markets for Americans to prosper. Grow our economy.

We have been essentially restricted or shut out of many markets, and countries have instituted their tariffs to make U.S. products too expensive to purchase.

We are returning to a primitive mindset that of envy of those who have much. A fertile ground for the Marxist ideal. The seeds of revolution.

More at The Logical Middle

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Liberation Tariffs – Reparations for Rural and Small Town America

During my lifetime I watched my former rural piece of heaven with its small town wither away. Kids had to pack up and leave after high school unless one might get lucky and snag a minimum wage job. Mom and Pop businesses such as textiles crashed with all the imports that arrived, and the couple of decent companies moved out to Mexico or some such country. They fell like dominoes.

I caught an obituary of a friend’s Mom in the local newspaper this week and it documented the decent businesses that folded one by one as she followed them as a worker one by one during her lifetime. From the ribbon factory ending with her last stand at the Seven Eleven.

How this Tariff thing will work out in the end only time will tell. One thing we do know, what we have isn’t working. I’d say this is the last stand. Even more importantly, do we really want to be dependent on feckless countries, many who mean us no good, on the stuff we need?

I hope more folks catch Trump’s roll out of his tariffs. Here is a part of the beginning.

“American steel workers, auto workers, farmers and skilled craftsmen,” Trump said from the White House Rose Garden Wednesday afternoon. “We have a lot of them here with us today. They really suffered, gravely. They watched in anguish as foreign leaders have stolen our jobs, foreign cheaters have ransacked our factories, and foreign scavengers have torn apart our once beautiful American dream. We had an American dream that you don’t hear so much about. You did four years ago, and you are now. But you don’t too often.”

“Now it’s our turn to prosper, and in so doing, use trillions and trillions of dollars to reduce our taxes and pay down our national debt,” he said. “And it will all happen very quickly. With today’s action, we are finally going to be able to make America great again, greater than ever before or. Jobs and factories will come roaring back into our country and you see it happening already. We will supercharge our domestic industrial base.”

For nations that treat us badly, we will calculate the combined rate of all their tariffs, non-monetary barriers and other forms of cheating. And because we are being very kind, we will charge them approximately half of what they are and have been charging us. So the tariffs will be not a full reciprocal. I could have done that. Yes. But it would have been tough for a lot of countries,” he said.

“For decades, the United States slashed trade barriers on other countries, while those nations placed massive tariffs on our products and created outrageous non-monetary barriers to decimate our industries,” Trump said. “And in many cases, the non-monetary barriers were worse than the monetary ones. They manipulated their currencies, subsidized their exports, stole our intellectual property, imposed exorbitant taxes to disadvantage our products, adopted unfair rules and technical standards, and created filthy pollution havens.”

“From 1789 to 1913, we were a tariff-backed nation. And the United States was proportionately the wealthiest it has ever been,” he said. “So wealthy, in fact, that in the 1880s they established a commission to decide what they were going to do with the vast sums of money they were collecting. We were collecting so much money so fast, we didn’t know what to do with it. Isn’t that a nice problem to have?”

More here with a list of the tariffs. Source

And with that we need to pack up and leave Europe. Wait until they have to pay for their own military and see how that goes.

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen warned that US actions would deal a blow to the global economy and urged further trade negotiations. Trump had announced a 20% tariff on EU imports, which will take effect April 9.

This vote of foolishness by the Rino’s of a meaningless vote since I understand the tariffs have already been lifted.  Good work folks. You couldn’t wait one day for this to shake out? You sure can wait on every other bill. It wasn’t going to go anywhere with the House not taking it up. Why did the GOP leadership allow this bill to go forward and embarrass the President? Just as the headline reads:

BREAKING: Senate Votes to Sabotage President Trump’s Canadian Tariff Policy With Four Republicans Casting the Decisive Yes Votes

A handful of Senate Republicans joined Democrats to vote last evening on legislation rescinding tariffs on Canadian goods, a startling rebuke of President Trump.

The final vote was 51-48. Here are the four Republicans who handed the Democrats an undeserved victory and snubbed the President:

Susan Collins of Maine

Mitch McConnell of Kentucky

Lisa Murkowski of Alaska

Rand Paul of Kentucky

As Fox News previously reported, leftist Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) sponsored a joint resolution that would terminate the national emergency Trump declared regarding illicit drugs and Canada. Trump has argued that tariffs are necessary to curb the drug flow and rebalance the unfair trading relationship between the two countries. Read more

The best of the swamp.

The Last Hurrah of One Nasty Sick Senile President in his Last Days – Biden Agenda

Repugnant.  The operative word describing the Biden administration in these last days in office. What do you get with a hateful senile old man? Try gumming up the world and the Nation to make it as difficult for Trump as you can. Already we know about shipping out as much of our military stockpiles to Ukraine in the last moments before Trump.

Little noticed was Biden move. Why now? Why stir this up now.

US issues new restrictions on chip manufacturing exports to China.

The Biden administration issued new restrictions Monday on exports of certain semiconductor chips and equipment to China, marking the Biden administration’s latest crackdown to curb the country’s competitive advancements in chipmaking.

The new export controls place more than 100 Chinese chipmaking tool manufacturers on a restricted trade list, prohibiting U.S. companies from sending them equipment without specific permission, the Commerce Department’s Bureau of Industry and Security said Monday.

And China’s response? China Blocks the Export of Rare Earth Minerals to U.S. What you need to know.

China has banned the export of several strategically important minerals to the U.S., in response to the latest round of American restrictions Chinese chip-making industry.

On Tuesday, the Chinese Commerce Ministry announced that it has banned the export of gallium, germanium, antimony and “superhard materials” to the U.S. The ban on the dual-use materials—those with civilian and military applications—comes alongside the implementation of “stricter end-user and end-use” reviews on graphite exports to the U.S.

The announcement follows Washington’s decision to strengthen export restrictions on semiconductor manufacturing equipment and software tools, and to expand the list of Chinese companies subject to these controls.

How about protecting some of your BFF?  Those who have assisted you in damaging Trump? Apparently considering cleanup on all the aisles, but especially with Schiff, Cheney and Fauci.

Politico on Wednesday dropped an explosive report that Biden’s handlers are strongly considering issuing preemptive pardons to several current and former government officials who they believe will be in the incoming Trump administration’s crosshairs.

The deliberations touch on pardoning those currently in office, elected and appointed, as well as former officials who’ve angered Trump and his loyalists.

The outlet notes that the Regime has become even more panicked since Trump announced he was picking MAGA hero Kash Patel to drain the Deep State swamp and ensure those who persecuted Trump do not escape punishment.

The figures include Senator-elect Adam “Pencilneck” Schiff, lying warmonger Liz Cheney, and COVID fraudster Anthony Fauci.

Then we have the Social Security workers. Something to gum up the works here at home for Musk and Kennedy. After all they announced that the worker bees should be at work.

CNN:

Tens of thousands of Social Security Administration staffers can continue teleworking into 2029 under a recent deal signed between their union and the agency. The agreement comes as the incoming Trump administration and its newly created Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, vow to require federal workers to return to the office full time in an effort to cull their numbers.

The updated contract deal locks in the current levels of telework for American Federation of Government Employees members at the agency until late October 2029, according to a letter written by Rich Couture, AFGE general committee spokesperson and head of the union’s Council 215, and viewed by CNN. The agreement was signed by SSA Commissioner Martin O’Malley just before he stepped down to run for Democratic National Committee chair.

Then Biden skips off to Africa dropping off a $Billion buckeroos for the boys after pardoning his son Hunter.

The best of the swamp.

New tariffs? We already have tariffs on 12,000 products

 

If we think the the US does not impose tariffs, think again. Before we get our knickers in a knot, let’s take a look back.

The Truth. We already impose over 12,000 tariffs on imports. In a story that appeared in Business Insider back in October of 2010, during the reign of Obama and Clinton, we learned that as far as tariffs are concerned, we are already knee-deep in applying tariffs to our favorite swamp benefactor businesses. Surprised? So when Congress gets on its high horse and tells us that we will have a trade war, ask them about the imposed tariffs on American products that happen to have great lobbyists, and are surviving. “Free Trade?”

Obama’s economic adviser Austan Goolsbee told CNBC a tariff “destroys more jobs than it creates.”

If so, then Obama was a prolific jobs destroyer. There was a 31% tariff on Chinese solar panels. There was a 35% tariff on Chinese tires.

That last one destroyed 100,000 jobs. In China.

“Obama’s decision may affect the employment of 100,000 tire workers in China and may bring an aggregated loss of $1 billion to China’s tire exporters,” Fan Rende, chairman of China Rubber Industry Association, said at the time.

We give presidents the power to impose tariffs.

They use it.

And they help the United States in the continuous trade wars. H/T:  Don Surber

 

25 American Products That Rely On Huge Protective Tariffs To Survive is the title of the Business Insider article. The usual suspects are the benefactors. So when the media tells you that applying tariffs to Steel and aluminum will start a trade war, and that we are sacrificing agriculture for steel and will be hit the hardest, perhaps it is because they have enjoyed and benefitted the most from the tariffs the swamp has imposed on imports. Here are a few of them:

Most vegetables — 20% tariff

Asparagus and sweet corn — 21.3% tariff

Apricot, cantaloupe, and dates — 29.8% tariff

Canned tuna — 35% tariff

Shelled peanuts — 131.8% tariff

Garlic or onion powder — 29.8% tariff

Tobacco — 350% tariff

European meats, truffles, and Roquefort cheese — 100% tariff

French jam, chocolate, and ham — 100% tariff

Most auto parts — 25% tariff

Miscellaneous ship parts — 50% tariff

Chinese tires — 35% tariff

Sneakers — 48% tariff

Brooms — 32% tariff

Here is a portion of the article written in 2010:

Congress is preparing assail China  for protectionist policies, like a 105.4% tariff on US poultry.

But anyone who thinks America is a perfect practitioner of free trade needs to wake up.

The International Trade Commission lists over 12,000 specific tariffs on imports to America. Hundreds of agricultural, textile, and manufacturing items are highly protected. So are obscure items like live foxes. (The above link of the ITC is dead) Clunky  website is  https://www.usitc.gov is  the new website.

Complete story with pics at  Business Insider

Here is the 350 page HTS Modified to Reflect Increased China 301 Tariffs just enacted:

+ View article in full

U.S. already imposes over 12,000 tariffs on imports

 

The Truth. We already impose over 12,000 tariffs on imports. In a story that appeared in Business Insider back in October of 2010, during the reign of Obama and Clinton, we learned that as far as tariffs are concerned, we are already knee-deep in applying tariffs to our favorite swamp benefactor businesses. Surprised? So when Congress gets on its high horse and tells us that we will have a trade war, ask them about the imposed tariffs on American products that happen to have great lobbyists, and are surviving. “Free Trade?”

To hear Never Trumpers (and a few Trumpkins) tell the story, Donald Trump is the first president since Hoover to impose a tariff on imported products.

Obama’s economic adviser Austan Goolsbee told CNBC a tariff “destroys more jobs than it creates.”

If so, then Obama was a prolific jobs destroyer. There was a 31% tariff on Chinese solar panels. There was a 35% tariff on Chinese tires.

That last one destroyed 100,000 jobs. In China.

“Obama’s decision may affect the employment of 100,000 tire workers in China and may bring an aggregated loss of $1 billion to China’s tire exporters,” Fan Rende, chairman of China Rubber Industry Association, said at the time.

We give presidents the power to impose tariffs.

They use it.

And they help the United States in the continuous trade wars.

Everyone plays the game. We must join it — and win. H/T:  Don Surber

25 American Products That Rely On Huge Protective Tariffs To Survive is the title of the Business Insider article. The usual suspects are the benefactors. So when the media tells you that applying tariffs to Steel and aluminum will start a trade war, and that we are sacrificing agriculture for steel and will be hit the hardest, perhaps it is because they have enjoyed and benefitted the most from the tariffs the swamp has imposed on imports. Here are a few of them:

Most vegetables — 20% tariff

Asparagus and sweet corn — 21.3% tariff

Apricot, cantaloupe, and dates — 29.8% tariff

Canned tuna — 35% tariff

Shelled peanuts — 131.8% tariff

Garlic or onion powder — 29.8% tariff

Tobacco — 350% tariff

European meats, truffles, and Roquefort cheese — 100% tariff

French jam, chocolate, and ham — 100% tariff

Most auto parts — 25% tariff

Miscellaneous ship parts — 50% tariff

Chinese tires — 35% tariff

Sneakers — 48% tariff

Brooms — 32% tariff

Here is a portion of the article written in 2010:

Congress is preparing assail China  for protectionist policies, like a 105.4% tariff on US poultry.

But anyone who thinks America is a perfect practitioner of free trade needs to wake up.

The International Trade Commission lists over 12,000 specific tariffs on imports to America. Hundreds of agricultural, textile, and manufacturing items are highly protected. So are obscure items like live foxes. (The above link of the ITC is dead)  https://www.usitc.gov/ is the new clunky website. (Apparently we are doing something with china and the import of cast iron sewer pipe.)

Complete story with pics at  Business Insider

A follow-up story by Business Insider that is well worth the read, written back in 2010:

19 Facts About The Deindustrialization Of America That Will Make You Weep >