Skip to content
The Times USA
Menu
  • ABOUT
  • CONTACT
  • LIFESTYLE
  • NATIONAL NEWS
  • BUSINESS
  • INTERNATIONAL NEWS
  • TECHNOLOGY
  • PRICE OF BUSINESS SHOW AUDIOS
Menu

The Administration’s Trade Policies are Hitting Ford Hard

Posted on October 12, 2018October 12, 2018 by admin

Ford Motor Company just announced layoffs in the midst of a reported $1 billion in tariff-related losses. Auto sales are down due to trade tariffs that President Trump imposed on metal and other car-related materials. Competitive Enterprise Institute trade policy expert Ryan Young says this sort of economic calamity is not surprising.

“President Trump’s push towards government-managed trade is starting to show its effects. New trade barriers have already cost Ford a billion dollars, and the company, already in the midst of a reorganization, is laying off employees.

“Trump’s new taxes on foreign goods are intended to stimulate American manufacturing, but they are having the opposite effect, just as economists across the political spectrum predicted. U.S. manufacturing output was already near a record high before the new tariffs, and did not need any help, especially of this counterproductive variety.

“President Trump should repeal his new tariffs, and Congress should pass legislation preventing him from causing further damage to the economy.”

Ryan Young coauthored a recent report explaining all the economic harms caused by trade tariffs and other barriers. See:

Analysis: Common Myths and Facts about Trade.  In that report, Young notes:

MYTH: America Loses More Jobs to Foreign Competition than Are Created by Trade.

FACT: Trade Affects the Types of Jobs, Not the Number of Jobs. When the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) took effect in 1994, the United States labor force was 132 million people. As of this writing, it is 162 million. With 30 million more people working today, NAFTA critics are clearly in error when they claim the agreement has cost American jobs. But free trade supporters should not give NAFTA the credit. The size of the labor force is tied to the size of population more than anything else.

Trade policy does have short-term employment effects. The Trump administration’s steel and aluminum tariffs will create an estimated 33,000 jobs in those industries—and destroy an estimated 179,000 jobs in steel and aluminum-using industries, which will face higher input  costs. That is a net loss of 146,000 jobs, without accounting for the negative effect of other countries’ retaliatory tariffs on American exporters. Other new trade barriers are costing thousands more jobs in industries ranging from motorcycles to blue jeans to musical instruments to cherry farming. Displaced workers will find new work eventually, but they and their families potentially face several months of belt-tightening for no good reason.

Trade does affect the types of jobs people do. Tariffs shift workers from higher-value jobs to lesser-value ones, and hurt worker pay as a result. In the long run, this does not affect the number of jobs, but it does lower take-home pay, and raises consumer prices.

MYTH: Tariffs Can Force Other Countries to Improve Their Trade Policies.

FACT: Trade Barriers Do Not Improve Other Countries’ Behavior. In fact, it usually worsens it; other countries nearly always retaliate. America has legitimate grievances against other countries’ trade policies, especially China. The question is what the U.S. can do to get China to make needed reforms. Tariffs are not the answer.

Instead, America and other countries need to use the World Trade Organization’s dispute resolution process, apply diplomatic pressure, and enact bilateral or multilateral agreements that can be far more effective in reforming China’s unfair policies. The Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) would have enacted binding reforms, but the Trump administration, in its early days, withdrew from the TPP. A repressive China will always be poorer than the free world. A free and rich China would be an ally, not a threat.

MYTH: Don’t Lower Trade Barriers without Getting Some Reciprocal Deal.

FACT: Lower Trade Barriers Help the Economy, No Matter What Other Countries Do. Tariffs and other trade barriers hurt the economy. The Trump administration’s haphazard approach to enacting them also has a dampening effect on long-term investment, as companies are unsure how best to react. Right now, more than 2,000 companies are lobbying Washington for exemptions from new steel and aluminum tariffs. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross is refusing to disclose the government’s process or criteria for deciding granting exemptions, despite bipartisan Senate pressure for transparency. In the meantime, as with any other trade barrier, the new tariffs open the possibility of rent seeking—both by companies seeking protection from foreign competition and by federal employees heading to K Street to lobby their former government employers.

Report: Traders of the Lost Ark

You Might Also Like...

  • The Best Places to Retire in 2019

    U.S. News & World Report, the global authority in rankings and consumer advice, today unveiled…

  • The Fastest Growing and Quickest Declining Airports

    In a new study just released by Upgraded Points, data compiled from 2007 through 2017…

  • Why trade Forex

    Before we get into the details of why Forex is such an attractive market for…

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Celebrating 25 Years of the Price of Business Show

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ViFPGoK-ks

VIDEO: This Week’s Best of our Network

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUpXVeHBKYQ

GDPR Compliance

USABR does not collect data on its visitors.  For more information visit: https://www.usabusinessradio.com/contact-us/

Contact

Contact articles@usabusinessradio.net for more information on articles on this site. BMuyco@usabusinessradio.net for all other information.

Recent Articles

  • Departure of Seven Michigan State Presidents in Ten Years Points to Systemic Issue
  • The Structural Failures Behind America’s Motorcycle Fatality Problem
  • Inside the Numbers: How Sexual Abuse in U.S. Prisons Persists Despite Two Decades of Reform
  • The Uneven Map of Drunk Driving in America: What Simmrin Law Group’s Data Reveals About Risk, Law, and Behavior
  • The Hidden Geography of Cyclist Danger: What the Data Shows About Where Riders Face the Greatest Risks

Also in TTUSA

  • Addressing the Global Labor Shortage With Those Diagnosed With Dementia
  • Latest Trusted Advisor: Be a Champ on Cyber and Privacy
  • Professional Headshots — Esquire Photos are Based Across in Tampa
  • Building Codes in Disaster-Exposed Communities
  • Gambling Society | Program to win on slot machines

RSS The Daily Blaze

  • When AI Awakens: Humanity’s Fight for the Future
  • AI Fear Grabs College Students As They Graduate in 2026
  • Trump Has Weighed In on the US Senate Race in Texas
  • Why Wholesale Cardboard Boxes Matter More as Carrier Surcharges Rise 9%
  • Violent Crime Versus White Collar Crime

RSS USA Business Radio

  • Hostage Funds: Why $829 Billion in Private Equity Capital Is Structurally Trapped
  • The Economics of the Four Day Workweek
  • Change, Resilience, and the Enneagram, Oh My!
  • Leading Fiscal Policy Expert Provides US Economy a “Physical”
  • A Powerful Example of Feedback at Work

RSS USA Daily Times

  • The Fatty Acid Burn Switch and the Glucose Cycle
  • How Entertainment Franchises Are Reshaping the Snack Aisle
  • Get Organized Day Is April 26. But if We Aren’t Organized Yet, What Are the Chances This Year Will Be Different?
  • Kwong v. United States: A New Legal Precedent for Taxpayers
  • Culture Scholar – Part Two: From Survival to Systems

RSS USA Daily Chronicles.

  • Reclaiming Every Dollar: The Pandemic-Era Interest Freeze
  • The Value Acceleration Journey: How Privately Held Businesses Intentionally Build Enterprise Value
  • Smart Food Choices To Prevent Diabetes
  • When Empathy Backfires: The Leadership Relational Trap
  • How To Make Doula Services Affordable

RSS Price of Business

  • Change, Resilience, and the Enneagram, Oh My!
  • AI Fear Grabs College Students As They Graduate in 2026
  • Frankenstein Goes to SF State
  • Common Myths About Dental Implants (and the Truth Behind Them) — Insights From Naples Dental and Wellness Center
  • How To Automate the Most Boring Parts of Running a Business

RSS US Daily Review

  • Faith Meets Fantasy: The LitRPG Revolution
  • How a Quiet Morning Prayer Became a #1 Bestseller in Three Countries
  • Pelvic Floor Health: Why It Matters More Than Most People Realize
  • Constantly on Alert: When Stress Becomes the New Normal
  • The Greatest Healthcare Disruption in History Is Happening Now

PoB Digital Network

US Daily Review

USA Business Radio

USA Daily Chronicles

USA Daily Times

The Daily Blaze

The Times USA

Price of Business

Privacy Policy

https://www.thetimesusa.com/privacy-policy-2/

© 2026 The Times USA | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme