logo
Trump's Longtime Obsession With Trade Deficits Suggests His Tariffs Won't End Soon

Trump's Longtime Obsession With Trade Deficits Suggests His Tariffs Won't End Soon

Yahoo04-04-2025
The "reciprocal" tariffs that President Donald Trump announced this week are based on a flagrant fallacy: the idea that there is something inherently suspicious about trade deficits. Unlike many of the positions that Trump has adopted as a politician, this one seems heartfelt and long predates his presidential campaigns. His comments on the subject during the last four decades reflect an unshakable belief that international trade is "fair" only when the dollar value of imports from any given country happens to match the dollar value of U.S. exports to that country.
Trump's long history of economic illiteracy suggests he is determined to pursue this trade war, which features import taxes that are much steeper and far broader than the ones he imposed during his first term, no matter how much pain it inflicts on American consumers and businesses. If there is any cause for hope on that score, it is Trump's similarly long-standing eagerness to look like a winner by making shrewd deals. The tension between those two instincts explains why Trump contradicts himself by presenting his tariffs as both a short-term bargaining tactic and a long-term strategy for raising revenue and boosting the U.S. economy.
When Trump published his first book, The Art of the Deal, in 1987, he saw Japan as America's main economic nemesis. "For decades now," he complained, "they have become wealthier in large measure by screwing the United States with a self-serving trade policy that our political leaders have never been able to fully understand or counteract." Although China has replaced Japan as the primary threat, Trump is still believes that other countries "become wealthier" by "screwing the United States," the grievance at the heart of his new tariffs.
Thirteen years later in The America We Deserve, Trump explained the logic underlying that conviction. "You only have to look at our trade deficit to see that we are being taken to the cleaners by our trading partners," he wrote. "We've fallen into the habit of mistaking the easy availability of cheap, sweatshop-produced product for solid and sustainable economic stability. America has been ripped off by virtually every country we do business with."
Voluntary economic exchanges, whether or not they cross borders, manifestly benefit both parties; otherwise, they would not happen. But as Trump sees it, trade is a zero-sum game in which the rules are rigged against the United States.
Although Trump presented trade deficits as conclusive evidence of chicanery in The America We Deserve, he did not offer tariffs as a solution. The word does not even appear in the book—a pretty striking omission for someone who would later describe himself as "Tariff Man" and declare that "tariffs are the greatest thing ever invented." Back then, Trump thought the best way to reduce "our trade deficit" was "tougher negotiations, not protectionist walls around America."
Those negotiations, Trump said, would aim to eliminate trade barriers erected by foreign governments. "We need to ensure that foreign markets in Japan and France and Germany and Saudi Arabia are as open to our products as our country is to theirs," he wrote. "Our long-term interests require that we cut better deals with our world trading partners….We need to renegotiate fair trade agreements."
As Trump saw it, this was his forté as a consummate dealmaker. "I would put the right people in charge of negotiation and would get involved myself," he said. "If President Trump does the negotiating, we'll get a better deal for American workers and their families, and our economy will not be as vulnerable to global pressures as it is today. Watch our trade deficit dwindle."
If he were president, Trump said, "I would take personal charge of negotiations with the Japanese, the French, the Germans, and the Saudis. Our trading partners would have to sit across the table from Donald Trump, and I guarantee you the rip-off of the United States would end."
Trump did mention tariffs in his 2011 book Time to Get Tough. "Either China plays by the rules or we slap tariffs on Chinese goods," he wrote. "End of story." As evidence that China was not playing by the rules, he cited its trade surplus, which to his mind meant "they are laughing at us."
Trump complained about "China's currency manipulation and other unfair trade practices," including inadequate protection for intellectual property. But his beef was not limited to specific policies. "Right now, we are running a massive $300 billion trade deficit with China," he said. "That means every year China is making almost $300 billion off the United States." Since Trump refused to acknowledge the value that Americans got in exchange for that money, he saw that situation as intolerable.
To back up that view, Trump cited Peter Navarro, a longtime proponent of "economic nationalism" who would later become his main trade adviser. "Peter Navarro points out that our trade deficit is costing us roughly 1 percent of GDP growth each year, which is a loss of almost 1 million jobs annually," Trump wrote. Even in the absence of identifiable "unfair trade practices," in other words, a gap between exports and imports is economically damaging.
"I'm for free and fair trade," Trump wrote. "Open markets are the ideal, but if one guy is cheating the whole time, how is that free trade?…Free trade requires having fair rules that apply to everyone….Unfair trade is not free trade." But Trump's definition of fairness always came back to trade balances. As long as Chinese exports to the United States exceeded U.S. exports to China, he thought, China clearly was not playing fair. Or as Trump put it when he imposed tariffs on Chinese goods during his first term, "our trade imbalance is just not acceptable."
The belief that trade deficits must reflect "cheating" is the explicit premise of the calculations underlying Trump's "reciprocal" tariffs. In setting those rates, a White House official told the New York Post this week, the administration assumed that "the trade deficit that we have with any given country is the sum of all unfair trade practices, the sum of all cheating."
Trump's 2015 campaign book Great Again (originally titled Crippled America) featured more in the same vein. "Our trade deficit has been a dangerous drag on our economy," he averred. "We've seen the Chinese taking tremendous advantage of our trade policies." He said America needed "a fair balance of trade," which required "better trade agreements."
During his first term, Trump was still claiming to favor free trade in theory even while rejecting it in practice. "I believe strongly in free trade, but it also has to be fair trade," he said in his first address to Congress. "It's been a long time since we had fair trade." That much was obvious, he thought, given that "our trade deficit in goods with the world last year was nearly $800 billion."
In America, Trump told the U.N. General Assembly in 2017, "we seek stronger ties of business and trade with all nations of good will, but this trade must be fair and it must be reciprocal." He hit the same theme in a 2018 speech to the World Economic Forum: "We cannot have free and open trade if some countries exploit the system at the expense of others. We support free trade, but it needs to be fair and reciprocal." He added that "the United States is prepared to negotiate mutually beneficial, bilateral trade agreements with all countries." Speaking to the Veterans of Foreign Wars later that year, Trump clarified that he wanted "fair trade deals, not stupid trade deals."
What does Trump mean by "fair trade"? In Great Again, he described Israel as "our best ally" and "a fair-trading partner." The Israeli government recently made its trade policy even fairer by eliminating all of its remaining tariffs on imports from the United States. But none of that stopped Trump from announcing a 17 percent tariff on all Israeli imports this week. As with his other "reciprocal" tariffs, the rate is based on the size of Israel's trade surplus with the United States. So according to Trump, trade can be "unfair" even when it's fair.
In pursuit of "fair trade" during his first term, Trump imposed various tariffs, withdrew from the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and renegotiated the North American Free Trade Agreement (now the United States–Mexico–Canada Agreement). How did that work out? The overall U.S. trade deficit (including services as well as goods) rose from $503 billion in 2016 to $626 billion during his last year in office. So even measured by the standard that Trump prefers, his trade policies were a failure, leaving aside the costs they imposed on American businesses and consumers.
Unfazed by that record, Trump is going bigger—a lot bigger. While Trump's first-term import taxes "roughly doubled the [average] tariff rate, to around 3 percent," University of Michigan economist Justin Wolfers notes, "Trump's latest round pushes our current rate to around 15 times its 2016 level"—"higher than the infamous Smoot-Hawley tariffs," which aggravated the Great Depression.
For Americans concerned about the impact this new, much bigger trade war will have on their household budgets and investments, the question is which Trump will prevail: the one who sees tariffs as a boon to the economy and a reliable source of easy revenue or the one who sees them as a bargaining tool that can be used to extract concessions from other countries, such as the elimination of trade barriers or assistance in border control and the war on drugs. Does Trump want to strike a deal, or is he determined to see this through in the hope that tariffs will ultimately boost domestic production and manufacturing jobs?
"I think we're going to wait and see how this plays out," Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said when asked whether the new tariffs will be permanent. Conservative journalist Tim Carney thought that was telling: "This is key. The tariffs cannot cultivate domestic manufacturing, because they were made to be contingent, temporary, negotiable—because for our Quid Pro Quo President, everything is always on the table."
Still, given Trump's obsession with trade deficits, it is hard to imagine what sort of deal would satisfy him. If trade is "fair and reciprocal" only when imports equal exports, there is not much that a country like Israel can do to address Trump's grievance, short of blocking mutually beneficial trade. But if Trump is willing to declare victory without achieving his avowed goals (as he did during his first term), this trade war could end sooner than his rhetoric suggests. We have to hope that Trump's vanity prevails over his principles.
The post Trump's Longtime Obsession With Trade Deficits Suggests His Tariffs Won't End Soon appeared first on Reason.com.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

European leaders to join Ukraine's Zelenskyy for White House meeting with Trump
European leaders to join Ukraine's Zelenskyy for White House meeting with Trump

San Francisco Chronicle​

time16 minutes ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

European leaders to join Ukraine's Zelenskyy for White House meeting with Trump

KYIV (AP) — European and NATO leaders announced Sunday that they'll be joining President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Washington for crucial talks with President Donald Trump, rallying around the Ukrainian leader after his exclusion from Trump's summit with Russian President Vladimir Putin. The remarkable move — with one European leader after another announcing that they'll be at Zelenskyy's side when he travels to the White House on Monday — was an apparent effort to ensure that the meeting goes better than the last one in February, when Trump berated the Ukrainian president in a heated Oval Office encounter. 'The Europeans are very afraid of the Oval Office scene being repeated and so they want to support Mr. Zelenskyy to the hilt,' said retired French Gen. Dominique Trinquand, a former head of France's military mission at the United Nations. 'It's a power struggle and a position of strength that might work with Trump," he said in a phone interview. The European leaders' presence at Zelenskyy's side, demonstrating Europe's support for Ukraine, could potentially help ease concerns in Kyiv and in other European capitals that Ukraine risks being railroaded into a peace deal that Trump says he wants to broker with Russia. It wasn't immediately clear whether all or just some of them would be taking part in the actual meeting with Trump. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced on X that she will take part in the talks, "at the request of President Zelenskyy.' The secretary-general of the NATO military alliance, Mark Rutte, will also take part in the meeting, his press service said. The office of President Emmanuel Macron announced that the French leader will travel on Monday to Washington 'at the side of President Zelenskyy' although it didn't immediately specify that he'll be in the meeting. German Chancellor Friedrich Merz will also be part of the European group, but the statement from his office likewise didn't specify that he will be in the talks with Trump. The grouped trip underscored European leaders' determination to ensure that Europe has a voice in Trump's attempted peace-making, after the U.S. president's summit on Friday with Putin — to which Zelenskyy wasn't invited.

Ukraine and allies left scrambling as Trump shifts toward Putin after Alaska summit
Ukraine and allies left scrambling as Trump shifts toward Putin after Alaska summit

CNBC

time17 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Ukraine and allies left scrambling as Trump shifts toward Putin after Alaska summit

LONDON — Ukraine and its allies were scrambling Sunday to respond to President Donald Trump's apparent shift toward Vladimir Putin's hardline position after their summit in Alaska. European leaders announced that they would join Ukraine's Volodymyr Zelenskyy in Washington on Monday as they seek to navigate America's new approach to ending the war. Trump signaled Saturday that he was reversing his insistence on a ceasefire and instead pursuing a permanent peace deal — aligning the United States with the Kremlin rather than Kyiv and its European backers. As Ukraine and Europe work out how best to move forward, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, European Commission President Ursula von de Leyen, Finnish President Alexander Stubb and German Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced that they would be joining Zelenskyy, perhaps hoping to ensure there is no repeat of his last Oval Office meeting. "The trip will serve as an exchange of information" with Trump, Merz' office said. "The talks will address, among other things, security guarantees, territorial issues, and continued support for Ukraine in its defense against Russian aggression." The news came ahead of a virtual meeting of the so-called "coalition of the willing," which includes more than 30 countries working together to support Ukraine. While Trump's reversal on pursuing a ceasefire before fuller peace talks fueled alarm on the continent, he did appear to have taken a step toward another position more aligned with the wishes of Ukraine and Europe. Trump directly engaged with Zelenskyy and European leaders by phone early Saturday morning about the U.S. taking part in a potential NATO-like security guarantee for Ukraine as part of a deal with Russia, two senior administration officials and three sources familiar with the discussions told NBC News. "European and American security guarantees were discussed," one source familiar with the discussions said. "U.S. troops on the ground was not discussed or entertained by [Trump]." The security guarantees would be made in the scenario that Russia were to invade Ukraine, again, after a would-be peace deal, the sources said. The sources said that those protections, as discussed by the White House, would not include NATO membership — despite European leaders saying in a joint statement Saturday that Ukraine should be given the right to seek NATO membership. But it was clear that the summit had left Ukraine feeling uneasy. Zelenskyy warned that the Russian leader was complicating efforts to end the war by refusing to halt the brutal fighting before holding further talks. "Russia rebuffs numerous calls for a ceasefire and has not yet determined when it will stop the killing. This complicates the situation," Zelenskyy said in a post on X late Saturday. For civilians on the ground, still under Russian attack even as the diplomatic maneuvering played out, it was not just the substance but the optics of the Alaska talks that caused frustration. "I was hoping that the U.S. wouldn't roll out the red carpet to the enemy," Kyiv resident Natalya Lypei said Saturday. "How can you welcome a tyrant like this?"

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store