Trump Opens Trade Talks Window While Threatening China With Steeper Tariffs
- Reference: 0176955373
- News link: https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/04/07/1558211/trump-opens-trade-talks-window-while-threatening-china-with-steeper-tariffs
- Source link:
The ultimatum to Beijing demands China withdraw [2]a 34% increase by April 8, 2025, or face supplementary tariffs effective April 9, which would push total levies on Chinese goods to 104% or higher. Trump has already imposed a 20% tariff over fentanyl concerns and a 34% tariff related to trade issues. "Negotiations with other countries, which have requested meetings, will begin taking place immediately," Trump wrote on social media, marking a shift from the administration's previously unyielding stance.
[1] https://www.axios.com/2025/04/07/trump-tariffs-china
[2] https://news.slashdot.org/story/25/04/04/1319228/china-imposes-34-reciprocal-tariffs-on-imports-of-us-goods
What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:5, Insightful)
What trump is doing isn't "aggressive strategy", or any strategy whatsoever, it is a demonstration of how harmful aggressive ignorance compounded by aggressive stupidity, multiplied by aggressive lack of checks and balances and greed can be.
Even trump's main sponsor, the south african nazi, is getting desperate.
Re: (Score:2)
I have to ask myself, if Tariffs are replacing Income Taxes, and other countries are negotiating to lower Tariffs, does that mean that the Trump Income Tax cuts are off the table?
Re:What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:5, Insightful)
Do you really believe that there was ever any real intention to reduce taxes on the working class? Tariffs are basically an internal tax that most affects the working class. So, the income tax cuts for billionaires may go through, but that "anyone making less than $150K annually won't pay federal [income] taxes" was never a real policy goal.
Re: (Score:2)
Since this is the case, why aren't people screaming this from the rooftops, "TRUMP REGRESSIVE TAXES WILL DESTROY THE MIDDLE CLASS"
Re:What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:4, Informative)
I mean, people kinda are: [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hands_Off_protests
Re: (Score:2)
I don't have evidence, but I have a lot of theories about why there is not more revolt in the USA. I would summarize that the American people in general really aren't very informed, educated, or engaged with reality, and that this is intentional.
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It's because Trump has been consistently lying and saying the exporting countries pay the tariffs. Somehow the idea that tariffs are paid by American consumers is met, even here on slashdot, with incredulity.
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Because the loud types who would be screaming from the rooftops are the MAGA voters.
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Mod parent +1 Funny. Made me laugh out loud.
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Too bad I have no mod points. You deserve score of 6 for this post.
Re:What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's a strategy, it's a mob shakedown on a global scale. He's a middle school bully doing exactly what a middle school bully would do. He thinks he can take the lunch money from every person in the world, that's all it is. Grovel at his feet, empty your pockets. The standard middle school response, punch him in the nose, is going to work too, it's just the damage is going to be greater than a prepubescent ego.
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If I hadn't already posted I would mod your comment +1 Insightful. That's exactly what it is.
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This is the number one problem with media: reporting idiotic acts as legitimate policy actions. The language matters. It is not "strategy". It is not "aggressive", either. As you correctly point out, it is dumb action born of abject ignorance.
Re: (Score:2)
Love the comeback from the smartypants, who lost 15% of their retirement money over two weeks, but is still bravely manning the gun hole for the guy who stole it from him.
Re: (Score:2, Troll)
> Love the comeback from the smartypants, who lost 15% of their retirement money over two weeks, but is still bravely manning the gun hole for the guy who stole it from him.
You don't lose unless you sell. Retirement accounts aren't for day trading.
The market will start bouncing back as soon as deals with individual countries are being made. Supposedly 50+ countries have contracted the White House. There is talk of some offering zero tariffs in both directions.
Sorry if the put options you are buying don't work out.
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> The market will start bouncing back
Yeah, wait for it like it's 1929.
Re: (Score:2)
"The market will start bouncing back as soon as deals with individual countries are being made."
LOL keep telling yourself that.
And I converted my 401k prior to Jan. 20. We all knew this was coming, Trump told us so, as did his opponents. The problem is that the country is filled with stupid people like you.
"Supposedly 50+ countries have contracted the White House. There is talk of some offering zero tariffs in both directions."
Sure there is. Kinda like when Trump renegotiated NAFTA, or like when he made
Re: What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:2)
Please read up on the relationship between uncertainty and markets. Then read up on Narcissistic Personality Disorder, while you're at it.
The panic is what makes him feel alive.
Re: (Score:3)
Few will blacklist the USA but many will put it low on their list of places to trade with because the USA is now seen as unstable and unreliable. Target your exports at China and the EU first, then chase the smaller stable markets. Only consider the USA when you have the surplus resources need to play their games.
I think a lot of people in the USA over estimate the size and power of the USA market vs the reset of the world. A large market yes, but they are not as big player as they think they are.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
> Love the comeback from the smartypants, who lost 15% of their retirement money over two weeks
I like many...are buying the dip....
Markets go up and down....shit happens.
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As long as other people's lives are being destroyed, even better for you, huh?
Nothing is produced in the stock market, every dollar made is a dollar taken out of someone else's pocket. Your comment needs to be appreciated in that context. But you've always bragged about your own selfishness, nothing new.
Re:What "aggressive strategy"? (Score:4, Insightful)
>> What trump is doing isn't "aggressive strategy", or any strategy whatsoever, it is a demonstration of how harmful aggressive ignorance compounded by aggressive stupidity, multiplied by aggressive lack of checks and balances and greed can be. Even trump's main sponsor, the south african nazi, is getting desperate.
> LOL - The psychological projection displayed by your post is massive. "aggressive ignorance compounded by aggressive stupidity", OMG, what perfect self identification you offer.
To be fair, most economists would probably agree with the original sentiment. For example, Trump's stated goal is to move manufacturing back to America. That will take time and money and no one is going to do that if the tariffs can be negotiated or removed on a whim and foreign good become inexpensive and plentiful again. He's even bumping tariffs on things like coffee, vanilla and bananas which the U.S. literally can't ever grow domestically, in amounts to satisfy local demand anyway.
The only apparent strategy is to tariff literally every country, including uninhabited islands (okay, they have penguins), so smaller ones, who we don't really trade that much with anyway, can come to the table and Trump can claim massive "wins" while the larger countries, with whom we with trade a lot, retaliate.
Trade imbalances aren't (necessarily) bad and requiring "balanced trade" isn't (necessarily) practical. For example, the administration complained that the U.S. can't sell rice to the Asian markets -- (to quote The Daily Show) well, duh, they mastered growing rice 10,000 years ago. Now maybe if it's the "a-Roni" variety ... Other countries can't help it if they have things the U.S. wants but the U.S. doesn't have anything they want.
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> Trump's stated goal is to move manufacturing back to America. That will take time and money ...
That is being overstated. For example we have idle and underused auto plants in the US. The plants shifted production to Canada and Mexico, Trump is trying to reverse that. This is something quite different than a new chip fabrication plant.
> ... and no one is going to do that if the tariffs can be negotiated or removed on a whim and foreign good become inexpensive and plentiful again.
Note Biden did not remove Trump tariff's on China. And he was quite enthusiastic about reversing anything Trump related. Don't let the political theatre confuse you. Union autoworkers cheering pressure to shift production back to the US is not going unnoticed by Democra
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> That is being overstated. For example we have idle and underused auto plants in the US. The plants shifted production to Canada and Mexico, Trump is trying to reverse that. This is something quite different than a new chip fabrication plant.
What are you basing that on? I'd like a proper citation before I'll believe we have vast amounts of idle manufacturing just waiting for this opportunity.
Re: (Score:2)
> Japan has a big self sufficiency problem.
"Japan exported 45,000 tons of rice in 2024. An additional ministry plan is to export 1 million tons by 2040. Domestic demand for the staple has been steadily declining due to dietary shifts to noodles and bread as well as the shrinking population. Farmers have been leaving the industry at an accelerating pace, but excess production capacity of rice remains." [1]https://www.asahi.com/ajw/arti... [asahi.com]
Anyone who claims to understand what happens next is just bs'ing. There is no experience with anything remotely l
[1] https://www.asahi.com/ajw/articles/15665073
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"For example, Trump's stated goal is to move manufacturing back to America."
Another lie smuggled in. Trump has only one goal and it's not the country's best interest. Trump doesn't care about American manufacturing.
"He's even bumping tariffs on things like coffee, vanilla and bananas which the U.S. literally can't ever grow domestically, in amounts to satisfy local demand anyway."
Right, which is proof Trump's "goal" is disingenuous, yet you repeated it like Trump is somehow rational and normal. Trump doe
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> The only apparent strategy is to tariff literally every country, including uninhabited islands (okay, they have penguins)
They also have a country code TLD, which is probably why they were included on the list. Yeah, we are in the dumbest timeline.
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So your only response to the most predictable outcome of this economic policy - predicted by firms on Wall Street months ago as well as Nobel Prize winning economists - is "no u"?
Are you limbering up before reaching for this kind of stupidity? Because I wouldn't want you to pull a hamstring.
Re: (Score:2)
> So your only response to the most predictable outcome of this economic policy ...
Apparently you did not read the post I responded to
> predicted by firms on Wall Street months ago as well as Nobel Prize winning economists
Wall Street is not a reliable source of info, they have a vast stake, a vast investment in the status quo. The Nobel Prize winning economists, are largely being misrepresented. Global protectionists tariffs are being conflated with specifically targeted retaliatory tariffs. Two very different things. And some economists are political. You do realize you are engaging in an appeal to authority fallacy. There is nothing wrong with challenging an authority and
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"Global protectionists tariffs are being conflated with specifically targeted retaliatory tariffs."
And who's doing that? There are no US-imposed "retaliatory tariffs", the US is the instigator here. Yet, Trump is now calling all his tariffs "retaliatory", sorry this "conflation", laughable as it is to call it that, is coming from within your house.
Trump tariffs are neither "protectionist" nor "retaliatory". Those words describe the "why", but the "why" of Trump's tariffs is bullying. Trump doesn't even
Re: (Score:2)
Which did you buy, Trumpcoin or MelaniaCoin? Maybe both? No doubt you will be rewarded handsomely.
Trump vs. 2k years "saving face" culture of China (Score:3)
My bet is on China..
Re: (Score:3)
> My bet is on China..
Also, China (and others) can simply move to getting things from other countries. For example, as a result of the first Trump administration tariffs China switched to importing more soybeans from Brazil -- now the largest producer of soybeans (40%) followed by the U.S. (28%). Prior to the Trump trade wars, 54% of U.S. soybeans went to China and with the trade war U.S. agricultural products will be priced out of the China market.
[1]Production - Soybeans [usda.gov]
[2]China strikes back at Trump with own tariffs, export [reuters.com]
[1] https://www.fas.usda.gov/data/production/commodity/2222000
[2] https://www.reuters.com/world/china-impose-tariffs-34-all-us-goods-april-10-2025-04-04/
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
The trouble is...china is almost fully dependent upon exports, and no one currently imports as much from china as the US.
Even combining the rest of the world, if that were possible, pretty much could not save china.
Without the US, if it came to that...china would pretty much lock up and halt.
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Chinese products are so cheap that the tariffs will not reduce American appetite for them. Turning Americans off to Chinese products will take about a 500% tariff. In the short term, Americans will simply by less. Long term, they will pay the 500% tariff because this tariff level is not enough to induce American manufacturers to compete with the Chinese on low margin products. No one can compete with China on cost.
Genius of waging trade war against the whole world (Score:3)
As an American I pray the world imposes next level retaliatory tariffs and even sanctions on our asses. Don't "negotiate", coordinate. Be at least twice as petulant as the orange one in your response.
Re:Genius of waging trade war against the whole wo (Score:4, Insightful)
People in the cult will still blame something else. Wait until social security payments start being interrupted and then you'll hear how it's totally necessary in order to own the libs.
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Already started. The gaslighting about how horrible Biden's economic recovery is started about 20 seconds after these ridiculous tariffs were announced.
Never mind that every single metric showed it was the best post-pandemic economic recovery of any country. Nope, don't believe your lying eyes.
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> As an American I pray the world imposes next level retaliatory tariffs and even sanctions on our asses. Don't "negotiate", coordinate. Be at least twice as petulant as the orange one in your response.
I actually agree. All the other countries in the world could trade amongst themselves w/o the U.S. and be just fine. Trump wants the U.S. to be an manufacturing island, so be it. Good luck to us producing coffee, vanilla, bananas, sugar, aluminum, rare-Earth metals ... while the World misses our -- hmm... ???
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> As an American I pray the world imposes next level retaliatory tariffs and even sanctions on our asses. Don't "negotiate", coordinate. Be at least twice as petulant as the orange one in your response.
Saw this article after replying earlier... [1]Trade Will Move on Without the United States [theatlantic.com]
> The tariffs will destroy another pillar of American power and leave a vacuum for others to fill.
> In fact, the administration’s tariff policy opens opportunities for Beijing, of all players, to portray itself as the more responsible global leader. In a meeting just days before Trump’s announcement, ministers from China, Japan, and South Korea issued a statement pledging to promote global trade.
> Tariffs are not going to make other countries respect the United States. But they can make them move on without it.
[1] https://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2025/04/trump-tariffs-hegemony-decline/682323/
Re:Genius of waging trade war against the whole wo (Score:4, Informative)
> Did you actually see the chart of tariffs that every other country had in place before any of this started? The world has already been waging war on us!
Sorry in advance for shouting... THE ***ENTIRE CHART IS A GODDAMN LIE***
It does not in fact display tariffs that every other country had in place. The figures were literally Trump taking trade imbalance of only physical goods as a percentage. The second column was dividing by two.
> China plays the long game, and we finally caught on. It will hurt. But there is no painless way to fix the current mess we have allowed to take place over the past several decades.
> Something is wrong when a $1 widget is cheaper to make in China and ship all the way across the world than making that same widget domestically. Things get really wrong when we buy that widget while they don't buy a single thing we make.
The US massively subsidies AG and energy sectors which is a source of endless protest from the rest of the world. China massively subsidies key industries which is a source of endless protest from us and many of our allies.
Out of 163 million jobs in the US less than 14 million are manufacturing. If you want to bring back manufacturing then federal and state governments will need to provide requisite infrastructure, subsidies and incentives to make that happen. You can't compete globally by walling yourself off from the rest of the world behind protectionist tariffs.
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So if I hold up a chart in front of you... you'll just believe it?
Wow.
When Trump isn't lying, he's either bullshitting or admitting he wants to do something stupid. Your gut reaction to seeing that chart should have been that you were being conned, not to accept it as proof of anything.
Re: (Score:2)
"So if I hold up a chart in front of you... you'll just believe it?"
No, because you aren't orange Jesus. Don't think you're talking to someone rational.
Re:Genius of waging trade war against the whole wo (Score:4, Informative)
So you actually believe that gaslighting nonsense the administration was showing? Those charts were showing absolute bullshit numbers that had nothing to do with tariffs until used as justification for levying tariffs. Some idiot [1]literally did division of a trade deficit by imports to come up with a percentage [usatoday.com], and that's what they set the tariff to.
And then another pack of idiots (you) bought that bullshit.
> Something is wrong when a $1 widget is cheaper to make in China and ship all the way across the world than making that same widget domestically.
So when are you starting your job in a factory making $1 widgets? Oh, I guess that's supposed to be "other people" doing that work for pennies, right?
Hey, maybe we found the "something" that is wrong?
[1] https://www.usatoday.com/story/graphics/2025/04/04/tariff-formula-explained-trump-calculation-countries/82878359007/
I'm waiting for the counter-revolution (Score:3)
The (moronic) fascists are in the building. They're not going to leave peacefully, you've already seen them attempt violence once to get in there. Trump's next bigly move will be to authorize suppression of protests, then declare an emergency and you'll all get to experience the pleasure of a bag over your head and a deportation to a foreign prison that's probably going to quickly turn into a death camp because it's out of sight.
Do something about it.
Re: (Score:3)
Most people don't openly admit to being a fascist. How many times in history has the party that's suppressing protestors on the "good" side of the equation?
Re: I'm waiting for the counter-revolution (Score:2)
Oh no! My tax rate goes up with my income!
You do not know what progressive means, do you?
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, definitely not fascism. "Bag and deport the protesters", such a normal, democratic concept.
"I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" is now "I disapprove of what you say, so I'll cheer on as your life is destroyed and steal everything you own once you are gone". Is America Great Again?
It's all about billionaire taxes (Score:2, Insightful)
Trump wants to cut 5 trillion in taxes for the richest people in America. He doesn't have the votes in Congress to do that and just added to the national debt. So he wants you to pay for it.
He doesn't care what happens to the economy, to your job or your home or anything else you care about. He doesn't care if you can't afford your heart medication anymore or if your social security gets cut or that the stock market tanking means your investments won't pay enough to cover your retirement anymore.
He'
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Yup, playing a game of chicken at the highest levels. Yolo! Yeahaa!
Follow the money--but it ain't the YOB's (Score:4, Insightful)
Please don't feed the trolls or propagate their vacuous Subjects. And even forcing me to look at the AC waste of FP failed to clarify your context.
What I'd like to know about this topic is where is the money disappearing to. Whoever had the insider information must have made a really big pile. Just on the shorts, but there are all sorts of "cuter" FinTech games out there. Billions and trillions of dollars that never existed in reality have gone somewhere in three trading days? Someone has pocketed a bunch of it, but who? And what was the YOB's cut?
The bits that make me laugh hardest are the claims that the YOB says what he's really thinking. Let's see if anyone can get him to tell the truth about what he's thinking with his hidden crypto-coin accounts. Or in the form of another failed joke: The YOB demands "One million dollars!" while the inside trader giving him the million is pocketing billions.
I've decided against giving the YOB any more free publicity. #YOB = Yuge Orange Buffoon, though your mileage may differ for the B-Word. And the worst form of TDS is reserved for people who think the YOB is gambling with his OWN money. It's THEIR money he is flushing away.
Re: (Score:2)
> Please don't feed the trolls or propagate their vacuous Subjects. And even forcing me to look at the AC waste of FP failed to clarify your context.
> What I'd like to know about this topic is where is the money disappearing to. Whoever had the insider information must have made a really big pile. Just on the shorts, but there are all sorts of "cuter" FinTech games out there. Billions and trillions of dollars that never existed in reality have gone somewhere in three trading days? Someone has pocketed a bunch of it, but who? And what was the YOB's cut?
> The bits that make me laugh hardest are the claims that the YOB says what he's really thinking. Let's see if anyone can get him to tell the truth about what he's thinking with his hidden crypto-coin accounts. Or in the form of another failed joke: The YOB demands "One million dollars!" while the inside trader giving him the million is pocketing billions.
> I've decided against giving the YOB any more free publicity. #YOB = Yuge Orange Buffoon, though your mileage may differ for the B-Word. And the worst form of TDS is reserved for people who think the YOB is gambling with his OWN money. It's THEIR money he is flushing away.
Off topic in a flying censor pig's eye, but thanks for confirming you have no actual response.
Re: Follow the money--but it ain't the YOB's (Score:2)
Dude! We were venting and will continue to vent. It is what humans do, Cheers!
Re: (Score:3)
> There's a thing in economics called the Marshal Lerner condition, and much of what Trump is doing economically appears to be aimed at manipulating this condition to the benefit of the US. It's an interesting read, from the game theory point of view.
> The economy is a wildly complex system with multiple "elasticities" holding all the pieces together, so that if you put stress on one aspect, other aspects will strain or relax to compensate.
> Just about nothing in the news media takes this into effect, all the descriptions I've seen have been justifications after the fact, and not actual economic analysis.
I agree the press has been extraordinarily intellectually lazy yet saying if you fuck with a system it reacts isn't by itself a terribly insightful or useful observation.
> If you raise tariffs then importers will have to pay more, so they will charge more, and prices will go up. This is only true when everything else is held constant. In the current situation everything else isn't held constant, the system has numerous elasticities, and things will compensate.
> For example, as of last night 50 countries had contacted the US to negotiate trade deals (EU being one of them, representing 27 countries for one contact). This is an elasticity that got pulled taught when the tariffs went into effect. This was the expected outcome, Trump said as much in the weeks leading up to the tariffs.
Is there a particular reason you can't negotiate whatever trade issues you have with countries BEFORE starting a global trade war?
> Furthermore, everyone and their dog has said that the unfair tariff structure was a problem for many decades. For example, Nancy Pelosi in 1996 gave a lecture to congress about the problem, and we've let the problem get progressively worse over the past 30 years.
> Given that there is some economic analysis that unfair trade is hurting the country, and given that high-level democrats used to believe that it was a problem as well, I'm of the opinion that the machinations of the current administration are a good thing.
Just because there are and will always be outstanding trade issues doesn't justify a grossly incompetent means of addressing them.
> It appears that all of the resistance to fixing this problem is because it's Trump that's doing it, and that fixing the problem in this same manner would be OK if it were the Democrats doing it.
In addition to being an entirely partisan argument having nothing to do with the m
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Trump managed to get China, South Korea, and Japan to all agree on something. That isn't an easy task. [1]https://www.reuters.com/world/... [reuters.com]
[1] https://www.reuters.com/world/china-japan-south-korea-will-jointly-respond-us-tariffs-chinese-state-media-says-2025-03-31/
Re: Awesome, dude. (Score:2)
> â¦an assertion Seoul called "somewhat exaggerated", while Tokyo said there was no such discussion.
Re: Awesome, dude. (Score:3)
He's a uniter. Just ask everyone but Russia.
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Winnie the Pooh doesn't even wear pants, you can see there's no genitalia.
Re:So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:4, Informative)
Biden only kept a select few tariffs in place. Prior to that Trump had to shell out over $60 billion in taxpayer dollars to protect the mass bankruptcies of farmers when China stopped by pork and soybeans from us.
China has already stopped buying pork from the U.S. How much more taxpayer money do you think will be spent this time when dozens of countries [1]stop buying our products [politico.com]?
[1] https://www.politico.com/news/2025/04/04/farmers-tariffs-trump-trade-war-00271146
Re: (Score:2)
> Biden only kept a select few tariffs in place.
Biden actually kept China tariffs and added more.
Re:So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:4, Informative)
China sourced alternatives and they never returned or were even interested in returning trade back to the USA except where necessary and they've spent all that time planning full independence from the USA in the long term. The damage never could be undone and now the world is going to at minimum plan for less dependency on the USA if they have any brains.
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Just to add a little "complication"
China has garnered manufacturing on a global scale due to the low cost of worker salaries, and huge investments in capital from their government
IF the US wants to match China on this, then they must do two things
1. Lower US manufacturing wages to match China
2. INCREASE income taxes to enable government ownership of US businesses
These things are NOT going to happen in Trump's presidential term, so he is effectively screwing US businesses and workers in a dive to the bottom
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> China has garnered manufacturing on a global scale due to the low cost of worker salaries, and huge investments in capital from their government
> IF the US wants to match China on this, then they must do two things:
> 1. Lower US manufacturing wages to match China
> 2. INCREASE income taxes to enable government ownership of US businesses
> These things are NOT going to happen in Trump's presidential term, so he is effectively screwing US businesses and workers in a dive to the bottom...
And, not in any other presidential term. I'm pretty sure U.S. workers wouldn't really (want to) flock back to low-paying factory jobs, like when there was more manufacturing domestically. Trump wants a 1950s workforce, but we're past that, especially with technology improvements, etc...
Re: (Score:2)
> Just to add a little "complication"
> China has garnered manufacturing on a global scale due to the low cost of worker salaries, and huge investments in capital from their government
And committed labor and environment abuse to further lower costs.
However it is a misrepresentation to think the US, even Trump, is trying to race China to the bottom. We will tariff China while striking deals with others. US manufacturing will shift to friendlier countries in Asia, that is the goal. Plus reversing some recent trends, like a shift of auto manufacturing to Canada and Mexico. Trump definitely want production returned to underutilized US plants. Then there are strategically motivated things.
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You clearly don't study economics.
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1. As an economic student or expert, do you believe that it is necessary for the USA to maintain a trade defecit in order to maintain reserve currency status?
2. Do you think inflation is necessary for a growing economy?
3. Do you think Americans are hurt by the low cost of goods from foreign countries (irrespective of quality)?
4. Do you think that Americans can compete economically at manufacturing in 2025?
5. Do you think there could be less permanently-damaging strategies for improving America?
Re: (Score:2)
> Maybe, just maybe, a retaliatory tariff is warranted when you truly face an abusive trading partner.
So why hasn't any president since Herbert Hoover fixed it? [1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Smoot%E2%80%93Hawley_Tariff_Act
Re: (Score:2)
>> Maybe, just maybe, a retaliatory tariff is warranted when you truly face an abusive trading partner.
> So why hasn't any president since Herbert Hoover fixed it?
Politics. The US actually accepted unfair trade policies for political reasons. The tolerance of European tariffs on US goods goes back to WW2 reconstruction and getting Europe prosperous to prevent communist inroads in the west. With China it was part of an engagement policy the US hoped would liberalize China. The European strategy worked, the Chinese strategy did not. Neither is necessary, or politically wise, anymore.
Re: (Score:2)
Getting hit by a car a 10 MPH isn't the same thing as getting hit by a car at 46 MPH.
Nice attempt at normalizing current activities by comparing them to 5 years ago, regardless if it is patently wrong.
Re: (Score:2)
> Getting hit by a car a 10 MPH isn't the same thing as getting hit by a car at 46 MPH.
LOL. You do realize Trump's goal is that neither side gets hit by a car at all. Ie zero tariffs both directions.
Re: (Score:2)
> Note that those first term Chinese tariffs were kept by the Biden administration.
He also eased some of them. More importantly, by the midpoint of Biden's presidency, Chinese companies learned to work around the tariffs. Mostly by exporting through Vietnam or Malaysia.
Re: (Score:2)
Also, China plays the long game; they permanently setup their counter measures and Biden couldn't negotiate a reset no matter what he did. For example, US soybeans are permanently off the table for good. The instability of the USA makes great deals undesirable long term because if we are not rotating back in scumbags we are still a slow moving train-wreck and all Biden could do with 8 years is slow the speed; the momentum seems locked in.
The white pigs bitched too much and elected to leave the farmer and mo
Re: (Score:2)
>> Note that those first term Chinese tariffs were kept by the Biden administration.
> He also eased some of them.
Biden also added some new Chinese tariffs.
> More importantly, by the midpoint of Biden's presidency, Chinese companies learned to work around the tariffs. Mostly by exporting through Vietnam or Malaysia.
Fine, company specific tariffs. Meanwhile actual Vietnamese owned companies face zero tariffs.
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So you're going to completely ignore how Trump collapsed the market for US soybeans last time around, and had to bail out farmers so they didn't all go bankrupt.
Well, now we're doing that with the whole economy. And you're cheering it on. Seems like you might be kind of an idiot.
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> So you're going to completely ignore how Trump collapsed the market for US soybeans last time around, and had to bail out farmers so they didn't all go bankrupt.
And you are ignoring the US industries and manufacturing going bankrupt due to China's predatory policies. The tariffs help persuade US manufacturers to exit China and manufacture in friendlier countries. That is the goal.
"Share of U.S. companies in China looking to relocate hits a record high, survey finds"
[1]https://www.cnbc.com/2025/01/2... [cnbc.com]
[1] https://www.cnbc.com/2025/01/23/us-companies-in-china-looking-to-relocate-at-a-record-high-survey-finds.html
Re:So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:5, Informative)
> Maybe, just maybe, a retaliatory tariff is warranted when you truly face an abusive trading partner. Sort of like the textbooks say. But people somehow forget when the name "Trump" is involved. If any other President confronted China and threatened retaliatory tariffs we'd see very different opinions. Well, actually, we did, no outrage under Biden.
Trump isn't making a legitimate case or effort. He isn't articulating a specific country or a specific unfair trade practice he seeks to remedy. He is imposing tariffs globally using an incoherent formula provably unmoored from reality using an incoherent justification.
He has publicly stated the reason for this is his desire to bring back manufacturing and literally return the country to the greatness of the glided age. The last time I checked the US is 4.2% of the global population. You can't seriously expect US companies to compete with the rest of the world while we intentionally place ourselves in a protectionist bubble cut off from up to 95.8% of our potential market. We tried this shit in the past and it proved to be ruinous predictable retaliatory tariffs and all.
> Put politics aside and go re-read your Econ 101 textbooks. Free trade required fairness, retaliatory tariffs are a valid "free trade" tool against a specific abusive partner.
Your contention is the world is "a specific abusive partner"?
> Its universal protectionist tariffs that are not "free trade". Two very different types of tariffs. Try not the let the name "Trump" distract you from this reality.
Universal tariffs complete with a 10% default are literally what Trump just imposed.
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Even though everything you said tracks logically, do not expect the economic suicide cult member morons to hear it. Some people don't learn the stove is hot until they've felt the searing pain themselves, no matter how many times you try to warn them.
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"Gilded" is quite apposite when talking about Agent Orange: worthless pot metal covered with the thinnest possible layer of gold.
Re: So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:2)
If that was the only thing that got hit, there wouldn't be this much outrage. But it's also hard to replace stuff that got hit. The stuff you literally cannot source in the USA because it requires an entire ecosystem.
Re:So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:5, Insightful)
> It is still crazy to me that the left switched so hard and so fast on topics like Tesla and immigration.
Please explain this yourself...
People who are concerned about global warming STILL want electric cars, they have soured on Tesla because the company's owner, Elon Musk is promoting a president who denies global warming exists
In regards to Immigration, you will find that the demands to stop immigration are coming from far right groups like ALEC
These groups are intent on creating a new form of slavery, people who work under extreme conditions for little pay with no legal protection from abuse. This has been a far-right aim for decades with the disbanding of the Braceros program after the SCOTUS ruled those participants could join the farm workers union
As far as I can tell, the "left" hasn't changed their opinions at all in the past 60 years, while the republicans are rewriting their narrative on a daily basis
Re:So he's doing the same as first term ... (Score:4, Insightful)
> Trump is basically doing what he said
He said that he would bring down the cost of groceries on day one.
Deport All Republicans (Score:5, Funny)
Make America democratic again.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Deport them where?
Why should any one country want to admit that scum?
They are yours, deal with them yourselves.
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Why should any one country want to admit that scum?
Fine. We'll send them to Antarctica. It's not a country so it can't complain.
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Yeah, dump that shit on the penguins. And they even put on a suit and said "thank you".
Re:Deport All Republicans (Score:5, Funny)
There are agreements to not dump waste in the arctics.
Re:Deport All Republicans (Score:5, Funny)
> Deport them where?
Mars. They constant stream of hot air flowing out their mouths could even kickstart the terraforming process.
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> Deport them where?
CECOT
Re:Deport All Republicans (Score:5, Insightful)
San Salvador is accepting any random people we send there without due process.
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Apparently El Salvador will take anyone at all, no questions asked, with a sufficient monetary contribution. They'll even give you a place to (forcibly) stay with bunk beds and a free haircut!
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Can we start a GoFundMe for Musk and Trump?
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Putin will, but otherwise we can pay El Salvator to take them.
But yeah, we're dealing with them ourselves, how do you like the outcome so far?
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Ah yes blame the victim.
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Let's hope he targets you next. See how much better he is then.
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What a wonderful disconnect from reality you have.
Re:Deport All Republicans (Score:4, Informative)
And, literally, "Charles Manson's rotting corpse" would be better than what we have now. Literally.
If you don't vote for the lesser of two evils, you get the greater evil, and that is what we got.
Do you think Harris would start trade war and wipe out billiuons of dollars of people's hard-earned wealth?
I looked at my 401K today, and it was down about 25% than when I last looked at it. He's *literally* costing people money, and Charles Manson's rotting corpse would not be doing that. Literally.
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What "messages"? I'm against illegal immigration.
Re: Deport All Republicans (Score:4, Insightful)
"You fool! Don't hurt their feelings or they'll vote for the insurrectionist felon who pledged to ruin the economy!"
> Eight years of messages like that from the left is exactly why we have Trump 2.0.
Re:Deport All Republicans (Score:4, Interesting)
> Eight years of messages like that from the left is exactly why we have Trump 2.0.
You're sentient, your'e intelligent, and no-one put a gun to your head at the ballot box. Own your shit.
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Quoting Hitler at campaign rallies undoubtedly energized the base.