How about I answer one of yours, and we see what we think about that?
OK, so if the premise of the OP is true, why are we in the jam we are in?
Because, for all intents and purposes, it is next to impossible to "Buy American" in retail consumer goods.
...
So why are we bankrupt, personally and on a government level, why have real wages stagnated for decades now, why does it take two people working multiple jobs to support a household and why is unemployment, gauged by the metric used up until 1986 hovering around 17-18 percent?
Why are we in the jam we're in? Why is the economy bad? OK, first, there's a lot of factors, of course. Given. We can both agree on that. So let's just stick to the factors relating to the topic at hand: international trade.
The prime, ultimate factor happens to be related: less and less stuff is being produced here in America. You yourself wrote this earlier in the thread, and posted all those cool pictures of huge ships and engines. That is, indeed the fundamental determinant of how the economy is doing; you're 100% right on that. If you don't
make stuff, you can't
have stuff, and in the long run you'll be poor -- it's that simple.
That leads to another question: Why are we producing less stuff? Well, to answer that question, maybe we should first ask another: why did we used to be producing more? In, say, the 1920s, the USA was producing a huge bulk of the world's goods, more than all of Europe. By the '50s almost half the world's goods were being manufactured in the USA (to the extent such things can be known -- economics statistics are not exact by any means). Why? Were Americans that much smarter or harder-working than everyone else, or had more natural resources or something? No, not really. What the USA had was
capital. Private property was secure, so vast private fortunes could be accumulated and invested into ever-more ambitious capital projects. Even more importantly,
all the private fortunes from
all around the world were being invested in the USA! French, British, German, wherever you were from, if you were smart, you were going to put your wealth into the United States. It was a good place to invest. You knew the politicians weren't going to seize your money. So the capital structure grows and grows. Machines to build the machines to build the machines... and pretty soon you're making those 500,000 horsepower trading ships you posted instead of hand-hammering horseshoes. Foundries a mile long. Ten-year projects to develop new piston ring formulas. Etc.
That's how you get rich.
Then, the USA gradually started becoming a horrible jurisdiction to do business in. At various times the politicians *did* seize the rich people's wealth. Taxes got higher and higher. You now had to deal with ten different layers of committees and focus groups and zoning boards and regulations and bureau-rats, and get "approval" from all these useless morons. In short: things got bad. No longer was the USA a magnet for all the wealth in the world. It was no longer safe, and no longer profitable.
At the same time, some other countries were becoming more attractive investment targets: Japan, Singapore, New Zealand, Hong Kong, the rest of the Far East, and finally China loosened up and started looking very attractive, too. China is one of the most business-friendly countries in the world right now. In China, if you want to build something, say a road, you sit down with a straightedge and a map, you draw a line, then you hire a bunch of engineers and a few months later you have a road. Compare that with the process in the United States, Land of the Free. Is your road going to encroach on any mating areas of the black-spotted prairie dog? That's gonna take at least five years to find out. And on and on.
So, investors started pulling money out of the USA and pouring their money into the countries which were now better and freer jurisdictions where they could make a better profit. In many cases even the actual physical equipment was pulled out. American and British and German factory equipment was hauled to factories in Asia, and of course the factories where they used to be were shut down. Whole businesses were transplanted. Businessmen saw the risk of their wealth being seized or destroyed as greater under Bill Clinton or Barack Obama than under Jiang Zemin or Hu Jintao. Can you blame them? A lot of them are now wishing that in the 1990s they'd used their money to move
more operations overseas, instead of on mergers and aquisitions, because now it's too late, they've got no free cash, and so they're stuck in the US, making little or no profit.
So, OK, end of gallop through history. I trust you can agree that my story was basically accurate. Let's analyze it now. For France (or any European country) in the first half of the 1900s, we were their China! The USA was the country flooding the world with cheap goods! They couldn't compete with our prices. So, if you're France, what's the solution? The only solution there ever is, the only way to become rich: make more stuff! Would it make you more prosperous if the USA were not producing so much? No! Would it help you to put tariffs on stuff from the USA to throw yourselves into a make-believe world where the goods from the USA really
weren't incredibly cheap? No! The one and only thing that will make you more rich is to make more stuff. Are we still agreed? Still with me here? The USA being rich really doesn't hurt France, any more than my neighbor being rich hurts me. In fact, the USA's prosperity helps France! France is better off with the USA around, all else equal, because then at least they can benefit second-hand from all the productivity and awesomeness going on over there by trading with them. Just like taxing and tearing down the rich doesn't help the poor people, it just makes us all be poor together. But ultimately, you don't want to keep "all else equal": you want to make France a free market, shrink the government, ax the taxes, and all-in-all make France a fantastically attractive jurisdiction to do business in. Then France can start getting as rich as the USA, and long-term, eventually, they will, as long as their freedom is as good as the USA's.
So for us today, China is our China. We are France. Tariffs are not going to bring the capital back. If it's not profitable for businesses to operate in the USA -- and it's not -- then that's that. Tariffs don't change that; they don't magically make it profitable to do business here; they don't magically make the USA
not a horrible jurisdiction. Even nuking China into oblivion wouldn't make it one single bit more profitable to do business in the USA. The idea behind a "protective" tariff is to make life less profitable for overseas businesses exporting to the USA. And it does succeed in doing that. But every other country in the world could become even less profitable to invest in than the USA, and that wouldn't make the capital come back. The capital would just disappear. And the more capital disappears, the more we descend into a dark age, reverting back to hand-hammering horse-shoes again.
So to review:
- Why is the economy bad?
- Because we're producing less and less stuff.
- Why are we producing less?
- Because the United States is a horrible jurisdiction.
- What is the solution?
- Stop being horrible!
- Will it help if we instead just try to make other jurisdictions less attractive by slapping up barriers to trade with them?
- Not ultimately. Ultimately, the only solution is to make your country not a total rathole overrun by pretentious morons in which no one in his right mind would want to start a business or invest his hard-earned wealth.
Until you solve that, you really can't solve anything. I do agree with you that tariffs are one of the least offensive taxes, if we're going to have taxes. And you could fund all the Constitutionally permitted government we need with a 3% tariff, maybe less, and that % would be able to decrease as we get richer and richer and trade volume gets greater and greater. That would be a lot better than what we have. But the tariff wouldn't be
helping the economy. It just would be hurting it less than an income tax.