UNCONSTITUTIONAL


Our Founding Fathers Rejected
FREE TRADE And So Should We


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Mexico targets Chinese steel imports with increased tariff of nearly 80 per cent

The tariff applies to some Vietnamese exports of cold-rolled steel sheets, although if the groups can prove the steel comes from a country other than China, they are exempt from the tariff, according to a declaration from the economy ministry published in Mexico’s official gazette. Vietnam’s largest steelmaker, Hoa Phat, is subject to a nearly … Read More

Ben Jealous: How a bad 1980s trade policy led to foreign ownership of U.S. Steel

This could have all gone very differently. If the government’s attempt to use trade policy to promote domestic manufacturing in the 1980s had been balanced with high-quality investments to make steelmaking cleaner and more efficient, U.S. Steel may have been purchasing Nippon Steel today. The cautionary lesson for today’s policymakers is that any efforts to … Read More

United States Seeks to Reduce Dependency on China through Higher Tariffs on Electric Vehicles and Other Chinese Products

China has become a dominant force in the electric vehicle market, with an estimated 60% share of global sales of new passenger electric vehicles, around 14.1 million units in 2023, according to BloombergNEF. This substantial influence has caused tensions internationally, especially in Europe. In September, the European Union launched an investigation into alleged state subsidies … Read More

Free Trade Isn’t a Good Thing; It Creates Unemployment

The fact that unrestricted trade creates domestic unemployment is quite obvious, and should be especially obvious to Third World people who have had the historical experience of deindustrialisation during colonial rule. Yet, there is a general impression around that free trade is a good thing, and an utterly spurious argument is advanced to create this … Read More

US to gather intelligence on Chinese chipmakers as Biden mulls tariffs

The US Commerce Department will begin gathering information on Chinese production of legacy semiconductors — chips that aren’t cutting-edge but are still vital to the global economy — as it looks to track how deeply reliant US companies have become on the technology from China. Some Chinese chipmakers have used low prices to undercut competitors, … Read More

‘There’s no such thing as pure free trade’: Katherine Tai defends China tariffs

U.S. Trade Rep Katherine Tai defended tariffs against China at Semafor’s Made in America Event on Wednesday, saying that “tariffs are a part of the U.S.-China bilateral relationship” because of an “unfair” global economy. “There’s no such thing as pure free trade,” Tai said, adding that China’s own tariffs and economic policy have allowed Beijing … Read More

House panel urges tougher trade rules for China, raising chance of more tariffs if Congress agrees

Lawmakers in both parties endorsed the proposal, a reflection of the growing willingness in Congress to build on the tariffs enacted during Donald Trump’s presidency, even if it risks retaliatory actions from China that would harm many farmers, ranchers and U.S. exporters. “It’s a strategy that of course involves tradeoffs, but I think a strategy … Read More

South Korea Offers $29 Billion in Aid to Battery Makers Amid Metals War

South Korea unveiled a 38 trillion won ($29 billion) financial package over the next five years aimed at helping local electric-vehicle battery makers diversify their supply chains as the US calls for a reduced reliance on China. President Biden is pushing carmakers to reduce their reliance on Chinese components and shape new supply chains with … Read More

Lawmakers Call for Raising Tariffs and Severing Economic Ties With China

Bipartisan lawmakers on Tuesday called for severing more of America’s economic and financial ties with China, including revoking the low tariff rates that the United States granted Beijing after it joined the World Trade Organization more than two decades ago. The most prevalent argument a decade ago was that economic interdependence between the United States … Read More

Katherine Tai Sticks Up For China Tariffs At Aspen Security Forum

“The decisions you make on international economic policy impacts your domestic economy.  We sit at that intersection between domestic economic policy and international and it is an uncomfortable intersection because these two forces are often pushing you in different directions, if not opposite directions. What we do internationally has to be connected to what objectives … Read More