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The Realpolitik of Trump's Tariffs
The Straits Times
|April 01, 2025
The US President's trade policy is all about power and security, not economics.
T-day — or Tariff Day — is coming this week. Or not. We simply won't know until it's here, given that US President Donald Trump changes his mind about policy daily. But assuming reciprocal tariffs do go into effect, it's worth thinking about them as Mr. Trump himself probably does.
Economists might fret about their inflationary effects, but Mr. Trump isn't motivated by classical economic theory. To the extent that he thinks about tariffs in purely economic terms at all, he would look at the evidence of the increased tariffs against China during his first term, between 2018 and 2019, and note that, even though these represented a material adjustment in rates, they had minimal inflationary effect.
As Mr. Stephen Miran, the chairman of Mr. Trump's Council of Economic Advisers, put it in his now infamous report, "A User's Guide to Restructuring the Global Trading System," the result of these tariffs was that "the dollar rose by almost the same amount as the effective tariff rate, nullifying much of the macroeconomic impact but resulting in significant revenue. Because Chinese consumers' purchasing power declined with their weakening currency, China effectively paid for the tariff revenue."
Readers who want to understand America's current tariff strategy would do better to think less about orthodox economics, and more about the realpolitik that motivates Mr. Trump. There are three points to consider here.
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