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  • April 17, 2024
    Blog
    More Steel Tariffs: Performance Art Masquerading as Trade Policy
    More Steel Tariffs: Performance Art Masquerading as Trade Policy
    The White House called on the US Trade Representative to “consider” tripling the existing Section 301 tariffs on Chinese steel. Closer examination reveals the move to be far more about politics than unfair trade practices.
    By Clark Packard, Scott Lincicome, and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
  • April 12, 2024
    Blog
    On Japan, Washington’s Economic Policies Belie Rhetoric
    On Japan, Washington’s Economic Policies Belie Rhetoric
    History has shown that Washington’s international economic policies often belie its lofty rhetoric about the importance of the bilateral relationship with Japan, as domestic politics continue to triumph over sound policy.
    By Clark Packard and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
  • April 10, 2024
    Blog
    What Senator Rubio Gets Wrong about Manufacturing and Industrial Policy
    What Senator Rubio Gets Wrong about Manufacturing and Industrial Policy
    Senator Marco Rubio’s recent essay making the case for industrial policy suffers from errors of both fact and logic that call into question his premises and overall proposal. Here’s a closer look at eight myths that undergird the Florida senator’s enthusiasm for robust industrial policy and the reality behind them.
    By Colin Grabow
  • March 29, 2024
    Blog
    More on Free Trade's "Pro-Poor Bias"
    More on Free Trade’s “Pro-Poor Bias”
    If an across‐​the‐​board 10 percent reduction in US trade costs generates outsized gains for America’s poor, what does an across‐​the‐​board 10 percent increase in those same costs—say, via the universal tariff proposed by Donald Trump—do?
    By Scott Lincicome
  • March 25, 2024
    Blog
    FTC Gets 2/3 of the Infant Formula Crisis Right
    FTC Gets 2/3 of the Infant Formula Crisis Right
    A report by the Federal Trade Commission identified most of the policy-related impediments that we identified as exacerbating the infant formula crisis of 2022. Notably absent from the report, however, is any mention of how highly restrictive U.S. trade policies also contributed.
    By Scott Lincicome and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
  • March 22, 2024
    Blog
    Some Welcome Trade Facts from White House Economists
    Some Welcome Trade Facts from White House Economists
    In Washington today, the unfortunate consensus among many politicians and pundits is that trade and globalization have been an unmitigated disaster for America and the working class, regardless of the actual facts. It’s good to see that White House economists aren’t buying into this new consensus, though it’d of course be even better if their views were more reflected in U.S. policy too.
    By Scott Lincicome
  • March 18, 2024
    Blog
    Sorry Unions, China Isn’t Responsible for US Shipbuilding Woes
    Sorry Unions, China Isn’t Responsible for US Shipbuilding Woes
    A recent Section 301 petition filed by several unions blames Chinese shipbuilding subsidies for the U.S. shipbuilding industry’s struggles in recent decades. The petition, however, is hypocritical, ahistorical, and—most of all—misplaced. While there is no doubt that China engages in market-distorting practices, they have little explanatory power for the U.S. shipbuilding industry’s enfeebled state.
    By Colin Grabow
  • March 15, 2024
    Blog
    On the Nippon Steel-US Steel Deal, Politics (Again) Tops Policy
    On the Nippon Steel-US Steel Deal, Politics (Again) Tops Policy
    If President Biden were concerned about the vitality of US Steel, as well as the US steel industry and the US economy more broadly, he’d quietly let Nippon Steel’s bid to acquire the company proceed.
    By Scott Lincicome and Alfredo Carrillo Obregon
  • March 7, 2024
    Blog
    Senator Wicker Can’t Wave away Our Dangerous Jones Act Reality
    A Wall Street Journal op-ed that called for reforming protectionist laws to improve the flailing US maritime industry elicited a response from Sen. Roger Wicker. In this blog post, we debunk several points raised by the Mississippi senator. 
    By Colin Grabow and Scott Lincicome
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