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[Congressional Record Volume 164, Number 40 (Wednesday, March 7, 2018)]
[Pages H1445-H1446]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
TURNING ABUNDANCE INTO SCARCITY
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from
California (Mr. McClintock) for 5 minutes.
Mr. McCLINTOCK. Mr. Speaker, Frederic Bastiat, the great 19th century
economist, posed a simple question that we need to think about
carefully as we consider tariffs and trade wars.
What is better: abundance or scarcity?
The answer might seem self-evident, but protectionists down through
history just don't seem to grasp it.
Suppose widgets cost $1 in Canada, but $2 in America. That means you
can buy twice as many Canadian widgets by importing them. That is
called abundance.
But some say that is not fair. We need to slap a $1 tariff on
Canadian widgets to level the playing field. That means we can only
afford to buy half as many. There is no more perfect way to turn
abundance into scarcity than by levying a tariff on imports.
Yet that is what was precisely proposed for steel and aluminum. By
slapping a tariff on foreign steel imports, the amount of steel
Americans can afford will diminish as the price rises, so, too, the
price of everything we make from steel, from cans to cars.
We are told this is necessary to save American steel jobs. Well,
Bastiat would tell us that what we cannot see is just as important as
what we can. We see the American steel jobs the tariff has saved by
blocking foreign competitors. What we don't see as clearly are the jobs
that disappear in every American industry that uses steel as their
prices rise and demand for their products falls.
Remember, every producer in a society is also a consumer. No consumer
benefits from higher prices, and no producer benefits from scarcer
materials.
Every country that has cried protectionism has suffered terribly,
including ours. Thomas Jefferson thought high tariffs could fund the
government and promote domestic manufacturing. That caused a
devastating recession that nearly destroyed our fledgling economy.
Herbert Hoover responded to the recession of 1929 with the Smoot-Hawley
Tariff Act. It didn't end well.
Trade is simply the exchange of goods, and both parties have to
benefit from the trade or it just doesn't happen. If I pay you $1 for a
cup of coffee, I am telling you that your coffee is worth more to me
than my dollar, and you are telling me that my dollar is worth more to
you than your cup of coffee. When we make that exchange, we both take
away something of greater value than we had.
But what happens if we slap a $1 tariff on that cup of coffee. Only
two possible things: I am either going to buy less coffee, or I am
going to buy less of other things to afford the tariff. Neither is good
for the economy.
True, some governments subsidize their exports, and that puts our
producers at a great disadvantage. In effect, these governments are
picking up part of the tab for the stuff that we buy. As Milton
Friedman observed, that is simply foreign aid to American factories and
consumers, paid for by the unfortunate taxpayers in the exporting
countries. The appropriate response for us is to say, ``thank you.''
Yes, that hurts the 140,000 American jobs that produce steel. But the
other 6.5 million Americans who manufacture products using steel can
make more of their products, causing their producers to hire more
workers and to pay them more. Jobs will disappear in the steel mills,
but they will reappear as better jobs in industries that can now obtain
more steel at lower prices.
What would happen if we had a war?
Bastiat answered that question 150 years ago. He said trade, by its
very nature ``is a reciprocal dependence. We cannot depend on the
foreigner unless the foreigner depends on us.'' If war clouds should
gather between Canada--our biggest foreign supplier of steel--and the
United States, we might face the prospect of losing their steel, but
Canada would lose all of the American resources and products that their
steel exports buy. Trade reduces the risk of war because it increases
the value of peace.
Bastiat marveled at how much we spend to build ports and harbors,
railroads and highways, all for the sole purpose of surmounting the
obstacles to trade that nature has created. What
[[Page H1446]]
sense does it make to erect artificial barriers to replace the natural
ones that we have overcome?
By that same token, President Trump has set the stage for rapid
economic expansion by reducing the tax and regulatory burdens that were
crushing our economy, and the economy is responding. What sense does it
make to ruin that progress by replacing the taxes and regulations we
have shed, with new ones?
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