UNCONSTITUTIONAL


Our Founding Fathers Rejected
FREE TRADE And So Should We


Chapter Samples Buy the Book

India Bans Import of $47 Billion Defense Items in Buy-Local Push

India will stop importing more than 100 items used by its armed forces in a bid to boost local manufacturing. The ban will be implemented gradually, starting with products like sniper rifles and light-combat helicopters in December 2020 and long range land-attack cruise missiles in December 2025, the Ministry of Defense said in a statement … Read More

Sweet-Toothed Indonesia to Cut Dependence on Sugar Imports

Indonesia, the world’s biggest buyer of sugar, is striving to cut imports by boosting domestic production at a time when rising affluence is increasing demand for sugary food and drinks. The group’s white sugar output accounts for 40% of domestic production, and it hopes to reduce Indonesia’s imports as output increases and market share rises. … Read More

China’s Brilliant, Insidious Strategy

Arrogant Westerners assume that Chinese investors, owners of American real estate, and legions of students will be eventually overwhelmed by American popular culture, liberality, affluence, and freedom, and that they will therefore repatriate to China as subversive agents of change. Chinese state subsidies, we were told, would in the long run bankrupt China long before … Read More

Trump reimposes tariffs on raw Canadian aluminum, Canada promises retaliation

Michael Bless, chief executive of Century Aluminum, one of the few remaining U.S. primary aluminum smelting companies and which lobbied for the tariffs, said the move “helps to secure continued domestic production of this vital strategic material”. During a speech at a Whirlpool Corp washing machine factory in Ohio to tout his “America First” trade … Read More

China Accelerates U.S. Corn Buying With Record Purchase

China took another step toward meeting agricultural commitments made in the phase one trade agreement with the U.S. with its biggest-ever purchase of American corn. The U.S. Department of Agriculture said Thursday that exporters sold 1.937 million metric tons of corn, the third-largest deal for the grain to any destination. This purchase tops the previous … Read More

China Has Amassed $1 Billion Glut of U.S. Cotton It Doesn’t Need

China has bought more than $1 billion worth of American cotton in the past three months. And it doesn’t even need it. The purchases — made as part of the phase one trade deal between Washington and Beijing — are hitting just as the pandemic shuts down clothing stores, decimating demand. That means China’s state-run … Read More

U.S. levies anti-dumping duties of 52 pct on S. Korean PET sheets

The United States has decided to slap anti-dumping tariffs of up to 52 percent on South Korean polyethylene terephthalate (PET) sheets amid Washington’s growing protectionism, a local trade promotion agency said Friday. U.S. firms called for anti-dumping duties of between 44.45 percent and 52.39 percent on PET sheet products from South Korea. PET sheets are … Read More

China’s Wheat Imports Surge to Seven-Year High Amid Food Concern

China, the top producer of wheat, has been under pressure to fulfill annual grain import quotas, which include corn and rice, under WTO commitments. The country lost a dispute last year brought by the U.S. which argued the quotas were not fully utilized. Read the article.

Is ‘trade’ a four-letter word?

Fred Hochberg, former chairman and president of the Export-Import Bank, and the author of Free Trade Is Not A Four-Letter Word, would have you believe (as the book title indicates) trade is not a four-letter word. However, he advocates free trade, and the word ‘free’ is, in fact, a four-letter word. Close enough.