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mhogers | 11 months ago
Consider instead:
- Semiconductor low-end fabrication (Taiwan, Korea)
- Basic electronics: circuit boards, USB devices, .. (China)
- Auto parts (Mexico, China, Germany)
- Generic drugs (India, China)
The reality is that the US is not the ultimate global hegemon anymore and therefore offshoring industries cannot simply be viewed through an economic lens.
tuna-piano|11 months ago
re-thc|11 months ago
They're "excluded" because they're coming later. It was announced they'd be specific 1s in that area.
mk89|11 months ago
pyrale|11 months ago
And if a more balanced trade relation arises, your current leadership is willing to destabilize the whole world, and threaten war.
unknown|11 months ago
[deleted]
jocaal|11 months ago
sandworm101|11 months ago
The hegemon concept is also out of date. World trade is not dominated by countries but by multinationals. For instance, there are no real "US" car companies. There are a handful of huge conglomerates who can choose to operate wherever best suits their needs. These respond to edicts from individual countries but operate at a level above nation states.
This is why international cooperation on things like taxation or environmental protection is so important. And it is why petty bickering by individual nations will be so damaging.
jocaal|11 months ago
I guess the only exception is semi-conductors, but we all know they are desperately trying to remedy that.
mk89|11 months ago
exe34|11 months ago
spiderfarmer|11 months ago
That’s why the logical thing to do is invest heavily in education.
Oh, wait.
pseudalopex|11 months ago
Buffet's article and Trump's tariffs reflected antipathy to net trade deficits. Not specific strategic concerns.
throw0101b|11 months ago
And yet tariffs were put on countries where clothes are generally manufactured and imported into the US from, which is why companies like Nike got walloped on the stock market.
> The reality is that the US is not the ultimate global hegemon anymore and therefore offshoring industries cannot simply be viewed through an economic lens.
Trump et al put a 37% import tariff on Botswana. What national security interest is served by that?
Israel got a 17% tariff place on it, but Iran is part of the general 10% tariff list. If these are about national security, why does Israel have a higher number than Iran?
There are valid reasons for tariffs:
* https://www.noahpinion.blog/p/when-are-tariffs-good
The universal tariffs that have been acted don't seem to have been done for those reasons.