Carnal_Flower
Literotica Guru
- Joined
- May 31, 2014
- Posts
- 7,031
What is the Orange Blob ranting on about and trying to do?
Can someone explain this in layman's terms?
Can someone explain this in layman's terms?
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He's saying that all other countries of the G-7, especially Canada and France(also Japan), have been acting unfairly(in terms of trade) to The U.S. for a long period of time. That's why he's imposing huge tariffs on goods from China, and threatening others to with the same.
Ironically, there's a lot of debate about the whole thing, and many Asian countries(such as India, China, and Japan) think Washington is just isolating itself now, because it's mounting more losses after their own companies(Asian companies/firms) export goods to the U.S.
While Trump might seem to be protecting Washington from harmful trade partners, from the point of view of the other countries, it looks like a cowardly act of protectionism. And also isolating Washington for the time being, purely for it's own benefits. That's why France says that they're okay with a G-6 without Washington's membership in it.
There's a 270% tariff on US dairy products in Canada. The dairy industry has always relied on massive government intervention to be solvent, and that goes for the US, too.So I've heard, but what does he mean by "acting unfairly?" And "using the US as a piggy bank?"
What's he bleating on about with this "230%" from Canada?
I admit it, I find this topic so boring to investigate myself. Looked up trade deficit and it's so complicated. As usual with him he's probably taken one random statistic from a whole bigger picture. He seems pretty convinced about this "US has been taken advantage of" and I'm wondering what relation to reality that has.
ALL presidents from Washington to Obama have apparently let the world walk all over us in terms of "unfair, imbalanced" trade. It "stops now!" What is he bitching about?
^^^^^ No clue what they're talking about.
Putting tariffs on steel will not, and has never, helped our industry. What it does is raise the cost of those industries which are passed on to consumers. Those consumers then consume less items because of the increased. Result: lost jobs.
Those who fail to learn from history and all that.
President Trump promised in his election campaign to do something about America's Rust Belt. The tariffs on Steel and Aluminium imports are one way of supporting US industries from low-priced products from other countries (particularly China). There is a worldwide surplus of production of Steel and Aluminium. China is probably dumping cheap steel on the market instead of closing uneconomic factories.
BUT - despite promises and agreements on Free Trade between countries, there are already tariffs and barriers on US products entering many countries including the EU and Japan. They are often higher than on imports into the US from those countries. President Trump is saying 'That is unfair'. There is some truth in that.
However, it isn't as simple as he has said. US regulations on some imported products e.g. cars make it more expensive to produce them than for other markets.
Agriculture is another can of worms. The EU (and UK) will not accept any chickens or chicken products produced in the US. Some US producers do not have the same hygiene standards for chicken production as in the EU and rely on washing chickens with bleach to remove the contaminants. While that is acceptable in the US it is unacceptable to the EU (and EU consumers) who insist that chickens should be reared healthily without the need to wash them with bleach. There is a Europe-wide campaign to tell politicians that people will NOT accept US chickens and products unless the US meets EU hygiene standards.
It is a response similar to the problem British beef producers had with Mad Cow disease. We could have inoculated the cattle against Mad Cow disease but no one knew what impact that inoculation might have on humans. The EU (and US) wouldn't accept British beef until Mad Cow disease was eradicated. It was, by mass slaughtering and disposal of tens of thousands of cattle.
The EU Common Agricultural Policy subsidises EU farmers. That means that they are competing unfairly against the US and the rest of the world.
Japan makes it difficult for outsiders to export into Japan not just by tariffs but by one-sided regulations making imports into Japan meet higher standards than local producers.
China? They make it very awkward for companies wanting to sell in China. They underprice and undervalue their exports making them far cheaper than they should be. They also exploit the rules of the UPU (Universal Postal Union) by making the cost of sending a package from China to the US or EU much cheaper than the same weight of package sent internally in the US or EU. US Mail and European mail companies HAVE to deliver the package even though they make a substantial loss on every Chinese delivery.
So - Trump isn't starting a trade war. That war already exists. What he is doing is concentrating minds about some dubious practices that obstruct free trade.
Will he succeed? That's another question.
Any industry under government control would wipe out competition around the world. Socialism wins.Ok, the picture is coming into focus. very interesting, thank you
Dumb Question: What would "free trade" ideally look like--no tariffs and subsidies?
Any industry under government control would wipe out competition around the world. Socialism wins.
The US still produces 2/3rds of their domestic steel and aluminium but Trump seems to ideally want the US to be an autarky with domestic surplus in steel and aluminium production so he's introduced large tariffs on states and regions which account for some of the largest portions of US steel/aluminium imports to try and incentivize manufacturers of products that use steel and aluminium inside the US to use domestically produced metals rather than cheaper imports, by making the metals more expensive to import than buy from US producers. Which will ultimately boost US metal manufacturing growth.What is the Orange Blob ranting on about and trying to do?
Can someone explain this in layman's terms?
Pretty bad. Not cyberpunk corporate dystopia bad, but kind of bad.Ok, the picture is coming into focus. very interesting, thank you
Dumb Question: What would "free trade" ideally look like--no tariffs and subsidies?
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't VAT charged at the end-user, and tariffs charged at import? So governments and other entities which might be exempt from VAT would need to pay tariffs?The Dumpster Fire is a moron. Anything said about him has to take that into account before all else.
The crux of the Trumpanzees' wailing about "tariffs" has to do with VATs (value added taxes), which are basically taxes added to the price of everything subject to them. For international trade purposes, the VAT is added to imports and refunded on exports ... which looks and sounds a lot like (a) tariffs and (b) export subsidies.
And this is the interpretation the Trumpsters -- particularly trade adviser Peter Navarro -- are running with.
For technical reasons that are difficult to explain, this is not the actual ultimate effect ... but for an administration whose reading comprehension is probably junior high level, understanding the reality is several bridges too far.
So instead they whine about tariffs and export subsidies.
Very unfair! Wah!
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't VAT charged at the end-user, and tariffs charged at import? So governments and other entities which might be exempt from VAT would need to pay tariffs?
VAT is applied at every step of exchange, so with a VAT of 20%, I might buy something from you for $6, of which you get $5 and the government gets $1, and then I turn around and sell it for $12, of which $10 comes to me and $2 WOULD go to the government, except that I get to deduct the $1 already sent to the government in my purchase from you, so the government just gets $1 additional. In the end, you get $5, I get $5, and the government gets $2.
So for imports, it would look very much like a tariff: if you're overseas when I buy from you, the same transaction applies -- I pay $6, of which $1 goes to the government and $5 goes to you.
Not entirely sure how the government's transactions are affected by VAT; in effect they would not pay it because even if they nominally did pay it, they would be paying it to themselves.
Thanks for the details.VAT is applied at every step of exchange, so with a VAT of 20%, I might buy something from you for $6, of which you get $5 and the government gets $1, and then I turn around and sell it for $12, of which $10 comes to me and $2 WOULD go to the government, except that I get to deduct the $1 already sent to the government in my purchase from you, so the government just gets $1 additional. In the end, you get $5, I get $5, and the government gets $2.
So for imports, it would look very much like a tariff: if you're overseas when I buy from you, the same transaction applies -- I pay $6, of which $1 goes to the government and $5 goes to you.
Not entirely sure how the government's transactions are affected by VAT; in effect they would not pay it because even if they nominally did pay it, they would be paying it to themselves.
From blue jeans to motorbikes and whiskey, the EU’s hit-list of products targeted for tariffs with the US reads like a catalogue of emblematic American exports.
Brussels first drew up the list in March when Trump initially floated the 25 percent tariffs on steel imports and 10 percent on aluminium, which also target Canada, Mexico and other close allies.
“The EU will exercise its rights on US products valued at up to 2.8 billion euros ($3.3 billion) of trade, as notified to the WTO,” the commission source added.