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- Newsgroups: sci.econ
- Path: sparky!uunet!caen!sdd.hp.com!apollo.hp.com!netnews
- From: nelson_p@apollo.hp.com (Peter Nelson)
- Subject: Re: Trade War?
- Sender: usenet@apollo.hp.com (Usenet News)
- Message-ID: <Bxv7rG.581@apollo.hp.com>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 14:47:40 GMT
- References: <thompson.721676187@daphne.socsci.umn.edu> <Bxo7xD.GLA@apollo.hp.com> <thompson.721887315@kiyotaki.econ.umn.edu>
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- In article <thompson.721887315@kiyotaki.econ.umn.edu> thompson@atlas.socsci.umn.edu writes:
- >nelson_p@apollo.hp.com (Peter Nelson) writes:
-
- >> To the contrary, France is Europe's biggest food producer. By
- >> subsidizing French farmers with their taxes the French are
- >> keeping prices artficially LOW for other Europeans. Of course
- >> this may not help *other* European farmers but this is no concern
- >> of the US.
- >
- >Perhaps I don't know how the EC system works. I thought that it is
- >roughly equivalent to the old U.S. agricultural price support system.
- >That is, a minimum price is maintained by having the government be the
- >buyer of last resort, with the excess production that is purchased by
- >the government stored, destroyed, given away, or dumped on the world
- >commodity markets. Is France allowed to dump its excess production
- >in, say, Germany? If so, then I should have said "French" instead of
- >"European" in my comment. It is still the case that _some_ European
- >consumers are indirect victims of the policy.
-
- There have been repeated clashes between the French and their EC
- trading partners over exactly this sort of issue in recent years.
- The US is not the only country which has run afoul of France's
- economic experiments.
-
-
- >> But how does it make sense to penalize US
- >> consumers or even French wine makers (who are not subsidized)
- >> over this? The US is the one who is escalating this into
- >> a dangerous game of economic chicken.
- >
- >This is a different issue. I agree that it is probably not wise to
- >risk a trade war, and that the current policy is very risky. But I do
- >believe that the complaints against the EC are legitimate. You appear
- >to oppose the U.S. retaliation policy in large part because you feel
- >that we have no basis for complaint. That is the part that I take
- >issue with.
-
- Oh I think they're legitimate, and GATT agrees; GATT has twice
- in recent months found France to be in violation of the agreement
- and signatory states *do* have the right to retaliate in the manner
- that the US is threatening. But that doesn't mean that I think
- it's smart for the US to take this action.
-
-
- >> If we have a problem
- >> with their dumping cheap oilseed on the market then we should
- >> limit our response to that.
- >
- >And how are we supposed to do that? We do not buy their cheap
- >oilseed.
-
- We could adopt a policy of subsidizing our oilseed exports to match
- the French policy -- since our producsers are more efficient than
- theirs to begin with it would require a smaller subsidy on our part
- and since we're a wealthier nation to begin with (i.e., our economy
- is stronger than the French one) the French government could not
- long afford to compete in this manner and would be brought to
- the bargaining table. This is still a kind of trade war but it
- is limited to oilseed.
-
- Or . . . we could simply accept the fact that subsidies are just
- another aspect of "unfairness" in the economic world (along with
- all those othe things I mentioned: labor costs, cost of capital,
- regulatory environment, labor relations, etc, etc, ETC) and do the
- best we can under the circumstances. (i.e., do nothing)
-
-
- >follow from the former. And you fail to address the former. Do you
- >deny that U.S. farmers have a vested interest in European agricultural
- >policy?
-
- Not at all. But as I said, We ALL have a vested interest in ALL
- kinds of disparities in the world. I'm a software engineer. Do
- I have a vested interest in the fact that there are software
- engineers in India who can do every bit as a good a job as I can
- for a tiny fraction of what I cost, and that US companies are
- rapidly exporting many such US jobs to many such nations?
- Does this justify punitive action on my part? We are living
- in a small world where not everybody lives by our standards or
- plays by our rules. We can't go lashing out every time we
- rediscover this.
-
-
- >> bankrupt themselves with a stunt like that because it would
- >> artificially lower the price of their laser printers so much
- >> that their sales volume would go way up and at $10,000 a pop
- >> the Japanese taxpayers would go broke trying to keep up.
- >> Notice you don't see them doing this.
- >
- >Bankrupt them? The whole country? I think not.
-
- It would cost them an enormous amount of money.
-
- > But you apparently miss the point. (Lower the support price if you
- > have trouble thinking about my example as originally posed. Anything
- > above the competitive price will do.) This is a hypothetical example
- > of a country hurting itself economically in order to support a (hypothetical)
- > cultural objective.
-
- But economics is a powerful force which tends to place limits on
- how far nations are willing to go in support of cultural goals.
- Look at Sweden's recent cutbacks in their social welfare state
- after their largest exporters have become awash in red ink and
- their unemployment rate climbed to (an uprecedented for them:)
- 6%! I'm saying that if we leave well enough alone basic eco-
- nomics will place limits on how far nations will be willing to go
- in these pursuits. Europe's protectionist policies have made
- their companies fat and inefficient and they are losing out to
- US and Asian firms in world trade. So now they are rethinking
- their policies. Economics has a way of doing that.
-
-
- ---peter
-
-
-