Boiled down, Trump’s tariffs are really all about China.

You Tell Me Texas - Paul GleiserBoiled down, Trump's tariffs are really all about China.

The story of the month – the story that has pushed Ukraine and Gaza and pretty much everything else off the front page (forgive the anachronistic reference) – is Trump’s tariffs. A 3,900-point drop in the Dow will do that.

This story has its genesis, in part, in the Clinton administration. President Bill Clinton was hellbent on bringing China – a totalitarian communist nation with a struggling economy – into the World Trade Organization.

Clinton’s critics alleged that he and his wife, Hillary, stood to profit personally from giving China the prestige and the enormous economic boost that WTO membership conferred. There is good evidence to suggest that the critics were correct.

Clinton, for his part, told us that bringing China into the WTO would lead to China’s liberalization and its adoption of Western values, all while eventually freeing its 1.4 billion citizens from the yoke of communism.

But it wasn’t just Clinton. George W. Bush, on whose watch China’s WTO membership became official, said this:

Politically, [China] can be a partner in working for peace and security. A China that embraces freedom at home will be a more responsible partner abroad.”

That statement didn’t age well.

What happened instead is that with China enjoying “Most Favored Nation” status, American manufacturers gained access to Chinese manufacturing capacity. However, American companies didn’t go blowing in to help Chinese workers unionize, or to start investing in “green” technologies to make China’s factories more friendly to the environment.

American companies went into China to take advantage of manufacturing unfettered by U.S. environmental regulation, U.S. minimum wage laws, U.S. labor law, U.S. workplace safety regulations, U.S. “green” energy mandates and, indeed, the entire U.S. smorgasbord of rules, restrictions and regulations.

And given just how byzantine and expensive the American regulatory state is, who can blame them?

But there is blame for this. Bringing China into the World Trade Organization effectively gave American manufacturers guilt-free access to slave labor. For American companies it was like being able to eat chocolate eclairs and Blue Bell Ice Cream after every meal without gaining weight.

Since then, upward of 90,000 U.S. manufacturing plants have shut down and millions of manufacturing jobs have evaporated, all at the expense of the American middle class. From a sociological perspective, millions of men who would have otherwise been able to afford to buy homes and raise families, were instead relegated to itinerant employment and permanent second-class status – all for the sake of marginally cheaper consumer goods.

Meanwhile the American economy is now yoked to a corrupt, tyrannical country that has the aim – and is gaining the means – to relegate the whole of the U.S.A. to second-class status.

Yes, the tariffs are scary. My wife’s and my retirement portfolio is, at the moment, even scarier still.

But Trump is at last confronting a problem that must be confronted. That is unless you want your kids saying to your grandkids, “America was the richest nation in the world once. But it’s not anymore because Nana and Grampy wanted a cheaper flatscreen TV.”

Paul Gleiser

Paul L. Gleiser is president of ATW Media, LLC, licensee of radio stations KTBB 97.5 FM/AM600, 92.1 The TEAM FM in Tyler-Longview, Texas.

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7 Responses

  1. Greg R says:

    Very insightful Paul. I never realized that until I read your post. I also feel like I’m getting a free education.

  2. Buddy Saunders says:

    Wherever possible, and it is possible in most cases, neither my family nor the company I own buy products made in China. That has been my policy for several years now. but very often, finding an American source for what one needs can be difficult. For example, several times a year my company buys 18-wheeler loads of transparent polypropylene bags, hundred of thousands per load, which we use in packaging comic books for resale on our Internet web site. All my competitors buying from China. Instead, I found an American source, but it was not easy and I am paying a bit more to buy American, but I am happy to do so.

    I absolutely understand and support Pres. Trump in what he is doing regarding tariffs and in seeking a level playing field. And I expect my congressional representatives to support the President’s efforts just as I do, or they will be answerable to me at the ballot box in the next election

  3. Linda E. Montrose says:

    When Sam Walton started walmart he wanted ONLY American made products and as long as he had control it was that way. But when he became unable to run the company, you see what it is today.
    I would love to see only American made products on the shelves but in today’s society American made is hard to find because we have become used to when something breaks down just going and buying another piece of JUNK!
    Clinton was responsible for sending a lot of jobs over seas and many other things to favor China. I am sick and tired of hearing how President Trump doesn’t know what he is doing! He knows exactly what he is doing and I stand behind him 1000%. The American people voted overwhelmingly for what he intended to do. NOW get out of his way and let him do it!

  4. Dang Vorbei says:

    You hit on a massive consideration, Paul. Americans of working age used to get a well-deserved sense of pride from making the best products in the world. The truly insidious side-effect of buying cheap junk made by slave labor is that now all of these young Americans are reduced to meaningless service-industry jobs that yield no satisfaction at the end of a long day. Coal miners and steelworkers could come home at the end of a shift in pain from head to toe, but they were proud of what they’d done all day.

  5. Diane Lambert says:

    If you need to buy tires and all they have are some made in China, tell them to order you some Made In the USA. They can do it.
    We just did!

    • John mccellon says:

      I just realized this from your comment. Every tire in my fleet are Chinese tires. Thanks for the heads up 👍

  6. Pete Fasanello says:

    While it won’t bother me to do with a little less for a while ,I hear that china is shipping products to Viet Nam to get it marked Viet Nam -in an effort to avoid tariffs .

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