National Association of Manufacturers PDF Print E-mail
Written by Stumo   
Wednesday, 26 September 2007

The National Association of Manufacturers (NAM) is one of the biggest defenders of current trade policy.  The group is led by former Michigan governor John Engler.  NAM fights efforts to rein in currency manipulation, ignores foreign taxes on goods we sell to them, and disputes every sensible proposal to change course.  

The "course", of course, is an $800 billion trade deficit.   NAM has no word on outsourcing, nothing on losing our innovation, and zero on the fact we have deficits in virtually every trade category.  Domestic manufacturers, who are members of NAM, have tried to change the policy of the organization (if they are still in business).  But the Caterpillars, Cargills and other multinationals feeding off the China outsourcing craze block the domestic guys at every turn.

The national interest is irrelevant to them.  The U.S. can go down the tubes economically, but Cargill makes money.  A whole bunch of it. 

(Read more).

In a four page ad in today's Wall Street Journal - yes, a FOUR page ad - NAM has the temerity to call the regional agreements "fair trade agreements."  No definition is supplied. Their messaging folks have decided to muddy up the "fair trade" label.  Expect to see more mud. 

A recent paper issued by NAM (PDF file, page 4) promotes the Peru Free Trade Agreement:

Once the agreement is in effect, both Peruvian and U.S. producers will face zero duties in each other’s markets. That’s what the NAM calls “leveling the playing field.”

As my son says... "not."

Peru will maintain a 19% value added tax (VAT).  U.S. goods will continue to be assessed the 19% VAT, which is a tariff in all but name.  The Peruvian government is free to rebate the VAT when its companies ship to the United States - which is an export subsidy in all but name. 

The Peru Free Trade Agreement is about Caterpillar selling mining equipment to Peru.  What are U.S. farmers going to sell to Peru?  You know... Peru.  The country with a per capita income of $1,820.  Very, very little.  Peruvians are not going to buy our steaks.  One U.S. steer today sells for $1,200 live, before processing in a packing plant.  And before packing in a refrigerated container to transport from a midwestern plant, to the coast, to a ship, to a Peruvian port, and then to a Peruvian store or restaurant.

Oh... and that $1,200 pound USA born and raised steer will have a tax assessed at the Peruvian port of $228 (19% x $1,200). (Yes, I know I ignored the processing and shipping costs plus profit margin).

This is not rocket science.  This is 7th grade math.

 

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