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Brian O'Shaughnessy, president of Revere Copper Products,
and I co-authored a Boston Globe op-ed that was published today.
We tried to cut through the "protectionist vs. free trader" garbage
that gets everyone nowhere in solving problems. The focus was
currency manipulation and the VAT tariifs.
The link is here. And in case they delete it sometime, the full piece is below the fold (read more).
Boston Globe
The gremlins of free trade
By Michael Stumo and Brian O'Shaughnessy | November 19, 2007
THE ECONOMIC foundation of the United States is being eroded by a $2
billion per day trade deficit. We simply buy more than we sell. America
was the world's biggest creditor, but is now the world's biggest
debtor. Decent jobs are disappearing, and not being replaced.
The "free trader" versus "protectionist" debate is simplistic and
misleading. International trade is good and a natural progression of
commerce. But no household, company or country can sustain buying more
than it sells for long, without consequences.
The problem is primarily caused by governments. The "comparative
advantage" assertions from out-of-date economic theorists are
irrelevant.
America has lost 3 million manufacturing jobs since 2000. Because we
export far less than we import, new trade-related jobs have been
insufficient in quantity and quality.
The losses extend beyond manufacturing to agriculture and the service
industries. Alan Blinder, former Federal Reserve vice chairman, told
the Wall Street Journal that "40 million American jobs [are] at risk of
being shipped out of the country in the next decade or two."
Companies like Revere Copper Products are fighting this problem. We
were founded in 1801 by Paul Revere and believe we are the oldest
manufacturing company in the United States. Our modern copper rolling
mill produces copper and brass sheet, strip, and coil. Since 2000,
about 30 percent of the manufacturing facilities that were customers of
Revere's mill have shut down or moved offshore.
America, long known as the breadbasket of the world, became a net
importer of food products in 2005. American farmers have become more
productive, innovative, and efficient than elsewhere. But food imports
now exceed food exports.
Two problems created by governments are major causes.
The first is currency rate manipulation in Asia. Let's say the
production cost of a brass doorknob in China is 100 yuan. The exchange
rate for converting yuan to dollars is controlled by the government of
China at eight yuan to the dollar, so the production cost in this
example is $12.50. But if the exchange rate floated free, it would be
five yuan per dollar, and the Chinese production cost would rise to $20.
US companies and farmers can compete when the currency rate floats free, but not when it is rigged.
The second core problem is hidden foreign tariffs called value-added
taxes, or VATs. Most US import tariffs have dropped tremendously in the
last 40 years, but virtually all our trading partners have replaced
their tariffs with VATs, reflecting taxes they place on their own
goods, on our exports to them.
A VAT tax system taxes goods - including imports - as value is added.
When the World Trade Organization was established, VAT tariffs were
exempted to placate France, which lowered its tariffs but raised its
VAT tariffs on imports.
Today, more than 140 of our trading partners have implemented VAT
systems. The average is 18 percent. The United States is the only major
trading nation without a VAT, and cannot legally impose its income tax
on imported goods. The playing field is not level. The overall trade
impact is astounding.
For example, when the United States ships a $20,000 car to Germany, a
19 percent VAT is imposed at the border, or about $3,800. The delivered
price rises to $23,800. The effect is the same as a tariff, which is
why we call these VAT tariffs.
The House of Representatives just approved the Peru Free Trade
Agreement. Peru has a 19 percent VAT. The United States will drop its
already low tariffs further, and Peru will drop tariffs on a slower
schedule. But Peru will always be able to impose a 19 percent VAT on US
goods that it imports.
We do not complain of companies building plants offshore or importing
foreign products if the playing field is level. But much offshoring and
outsourcing is driven by the advantage of having a plant on the
opposite side of these government-created barriers and then exporting
the products to the United States. This is neither free trade nor Adam
Smith's comparative advantage.
Congress can correct the currency manipulation problem easily by
prescribing countervailing or antidumping duties to merely neutralize
but not punish the practice.
Bills are pending in Congress that include sensible and effective
remedies that are legal under the WTO and deserving of support from the
Massachusetts delegation. If the WTO fails to support eliminating
currency manipulation, then stepping outside the WTO may be a rational
consideration.
Correcting the VAT tariff problem is more difficult. Because the VAT
tariffs are legal under the WTO, America cannot neutralize them without
risking trade sanctions. America should consider lowering taxes on
jobs, replacing them with a US version of a VAT.
Approving new trade agreements makes little sense without correcting
the currency manipulation and VAT problems. Our forefathers handed us a
good country. We should not squander it.
Michael Stumo is a lawyer and former farmer. Brian O'Shaughnessy is
president of Revere Copper Products. Both are members of the Coalition
for a Prosperous America.
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