It sounds like a great idea. We do not want to remain dependent on foreign manufacturers, so we will onshore manufacturing. We will beat the Asians at their own game by producing more of what we buy, thus leaving their industries in the lurch. That is, leaving them reliant on local markets. To be fair, the population of Asian countries is not exactly tiny.
Anyway, we have high self-esteem and we talk a good game. Transferring manufacturing facilities requires more than tough talk. It requires the personnel who can do the job. And it requires operations that can do the job as efficiently and as cheaply as foreign manufacturers.
It is nice to say that we are going to cut China out of the supply chain, and that we are going to stock the shelves at Walmart with American made goods. And yet, whatever makes you think that those goods will be sold at the same price as the previous China-made goods. And what makes you think that they will be of the same quality.
In other words, onshoring risks producing more inflation. Do we really want that? And whatever makes us think that we have the human capital that is capable of doing the job.
In the first place, as you well know, American schoolchildren are being taught critical race theory and other forms of leftist ideology. Will the children who are taught such subjects be capable of running the robots that prevail in modern factories? And besides, as one does occasionally mention, the grandees of Silicon Valley are running their companies with foreign-born talent, most often from either China or India. Doesn’t that tell us that America has failed to produce the human capital necessary to run those companies?
So, friend-shoring has a downside. We are living in an interdependent world. To think otherwise, and to overestimate our ability to compete, is folly.
Anyway, the Wall Street Journal reported the friend-shoring story, with an emphasis on what it might cost. As for raw materials, if we want to mine them in friendly countries we need to be somewhat cognizant of the fact that the green governments in many Western countries think that mining operations are going to befoul the pristine environment, and thus, that they refuse to allow it. How much oil exploration is being hampered by the greens? How is Germany doing with far less energy from Russia?
And we note that the status of the dollar, recently weaponized by the Biden administration, does not enter into the calculations. If these unfriendly nations find a way to circumvent the dollar, we are in deep doodoo.
So, geopolitical tensions are rising, and, dare we say, the current administration has been stoking them. It wants to make senile Joe Biden look tough on the world stage. Unfortunately, he and his band of cretins cannot even fake it any more.
As geopolitical tensions rise, Western governments have urged international companies to shift more business to friendly countries. Some critics think that could split the global economy into hostile camps, hurting growth and worsening inflation.
Advocates think “friend-shoring,” as the trend is nicknamed, can protect access to vital raw materials and components, drawing on lessons learned during the Covid-19 pandemic that saw shortages of semiconductors and some other components threaten vital industries.
But many economists fear restricting trade and direct investment to political allies could undo decades of gains from globalization, including raised incomes for hundreds of millions in the developing world and lower prices in the West.
So, Intel and Taiwan Semiconductor are building plants in Arizona. It’s a good thing. And now they are working with the local universities to help them to produce people who can actually work in these factories. They are worried that the immigrants coming up from Central America might not be up to the job. Minor detail, I am sure.
So, breaking down the world trade order might not be such a good thing. One hesitates to mention it, but the Trump administration, what with its tariffs and sanctions against China, spurred this movement. And, as David Goldman is at pains to point out, it was a genuinely bad idea, especially since imports from China have grown substantially in the aftermath. Go figure.
The Journal article continues, suggesting that we are flexing our trade muscles without reflecting very much on the potential fallout:
They worry that it could place security and political concerns above those of economic efficiency for a much wider range of goods than are necessary for security. And they think it could require countries around the world to choose sides as the global system of low tariffs and rules-based trade that was built in the aftermath of the Cold War fragments into closed bubbles.
And, what happens if friend-shoring produces lower economic growth around the world, and even if it immiserates poor nations in a cycle of poverty and famine. What will happen when the inhabitants of those nations get on the road to the West? How will a flood of immigrants impact the economic outlook?
They calculate that the creation of a two-bloc world would lead to a 5% loss of global economic output over a 10- to 20-year period—equivalent to roughly $4.4 trillion. While friend-shoring could lead to higher prices and lower profits in the West, the WTO economists believe that cost would be borne disproportionately by poorer countries, who gain most from the transfers of technology that globalization brings.
So, friend-shoring seems like a great idea. The practicalities seem to have escaped our policy makers:
The “non-friendly” countries—those that voted against Russia’s suspension or abstained—include China, India, Brazil and Mexico. In total, they account for 35% of all goods imported by members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, the group of rich countries that includes the U.S. and most of its closest friends.
Shifting so many imports to more friendly countries is probably further than advocates of friend-shoring would want to go, but that figure does emphasize how big an impact it might have.
For central bankers, any shift in that direction would tend to keep inflation higher than in the run-up to the pandemic, even after energy and food prices ease.
Friend-shoring means more inflation. It means that the shelves at Walmart will be stocked with goods that cost significantly more. This will impact the living standards of countless Americans. And of course it means less energy and higher energy prices.
Someone should give some serious thought to these daffy proposals.
I am usually sympatico with your essays as well as those of the Mr. Goldman, but in this one, I must demur. I submit that the emphasis on "cost" fails to take into account at least one benefit of "on-shoring" production. Yes, it may give rise to inflation and raise prices of goods, but by providing employment to Americans, it will provide a great benefit in terms of self-reliance, both nationally and individually. Do you really think that Americans are less skilled and motivated than the former peasants in China and India who, only a generation ago were subsistence farming or begging/starving on the streets of Calcutta or Shanghai? I assume you have/had children and that you always tried to provide positive reinforcements to their efforts, and did not merely provide an economic milieu in which they did not need to strive for anything. People are not mere economic units; they are individuals who respond positively to being deemed something more valuable than mere "consumers." At least, I believe they still do, although I am willing to admit that the machinations of the globalist cabal, a/k/a "globohomo" have been taking their toll.
ReplyDeleteLess skilled and less motivated than those former peasants-- that would be the ones who hold two/thirds of the tech jobs in Silicon Valley. And, by the by, if you ask Tim Cook and Elon Musk, both of whom have some considerable experience in the area, those former peasants are more skilled and more motivated than are our very own products of the American educational system. It's not a great idea to lie to people, to puff up our self-esteem to the point where it is going to drive us off a cliff.
ReplyDeleteIn my youth I worked on a project where the company I was employed at had made a sale of a dozen logging trucks to Indonesia. Now the thing was that Indonesia had a rule that assembled logging trucks were not allowed to be imported into the country. They had to be shipped in parts and then be assembled in country.
ReplyDeleteI always found this idea to have merit. Seems to kill 2 birds with one stone.
Actually, we do this, I imagine, for numerous businesses. In some cases we are not capable of manufacturing the parts, so we allow others to manufacture them, and we build assembly plants. The other problem is-- how are things in Indonesia these days?
ReplyDeleteI highly recommend watching/listening/reading Peter Zeihan. People forget: The current globalization is entirely due to the United States creating it at Bretton Woods. We ("they") did this as a giant bribe to join the alliance against the Soviets. News flash: The Soviet Union no longer exists.
ReplyDeleteOne hesitates to mention it, but the Trump administration, what with its tariffs and sanctions against China, spurred this movement
One hesitates to mention it, but the (first) Bush, Clinton, (second) Bush, and Obama administrations, what with their complete inattention to the fact that the Bretton Woods global trade system was created to win the Cold War and might need a new focus, ignored this now 30-year-old movement.
breaking down the world trade order might not be such a good thing.
A good thing or not, global trade is doomed, unless the US is willing to remain the world's policeman. It doesn't seem that we are (and I'm fine with that).
rules-based trade that was built in the aftermath of the Cold War
Nice passive voice. How about this: The rules-based trade system that the United States built, subsidized, and maintained at its own great expense for 70 years while earning the enmity of everyone involved. Why would we want to keep doing this? Cheap blenders from China hardly seems a compelling reason.
But many economists fear restricting trade and direct investment to political allies could undo decades of gains from globalization
Yep. That's exactly what will happen. Why is this bad for Americans?
More broadly, who is going to keep political not-allies from just pirating (privateering?) the stuff off ships? If China wants to start patrolling the world's shipping lanes, it needs FLEETS of ships that can go more than 1000 miles from port; it has three (ships, not fleets - for perspective, the US has nine fleets).
the green governments in many Western countries think that mining operations are going to befoul the pristine environment, and thus, that they refuse to allow it.
That opposition will, between withering away because the greens want their iPhones and the rest of us telling them to go pound sand (see upcoming $10/gal gas), become irrelevant.
I got too long for the input form!
the creation of a two-bloc world
ReplyDeleteThey must have themselves some GOOD drugs. TWO?!? I count at least five. Russia and China only count for the next couple of decades, if that.
1. Japan is in a good spot to become a regional power by coordinating the South East Asian response to China's coming implosion. The US will help and keep the US/Asia sea lanes usable.
2. Turkey is in a good spot to start re-Ottoman-izing its region. How hard will it be for them to take Ukraine after the current war ends? Although it is fair to ask, "who would want it at that point?" Greece? Who's going to go to war with Turkey over Greece? Italy? Unless they make custom rifles for grandmothers, Italy isn't going to war with anyone.
3. Sweden is in a good spot to re-empire itself (oil from Norway and UK). This probably requires Russia to continue to push west so the Nordic countries tighten their relationships, particularly in regard to oil. Lots of Baltic history to support this idea.
4. UK is in a great position to straddle the American / Northern Europe trade. Brexit timing was great. They're shaking off the EU just before it starts coming apart at the seams (or they started that coming apart, depending on how you look at it).
5. NAFTA. Canada (resources) and Mexico (labor) will do great as our friends.
6. Brazil and Argentina may work together or not; the rest of South and Central America are irrelevant although probably falling under a neo-Monroe doctrine.
7. Persia still exists in many minds. It's not impossible that Iran could become a regional power, but there are lots of people who will work against it. The question is: Where will the troops come from? America is definitely out. Russia will be gone. China will be gone. The Gulf states, particularly Saudi Arabia, don't even wash their own clothes (that's what Pakistanis and Philippinos are for); they're hardly going to become infantry in the near future. The Gulf states will still have oil, but who is buying it? They can't ship it anywhere because the ships will be hijacked (or sunk). The Ottoman Empire II will be a big customer. Probably parts of Europe, too.
8. France. As hard as it is to believe, France may regain the world stage. It has lots of good (or at least decent) relationships with its former empire's colonies. This will probably reform as at least a trade alliance.
Africa, as usual, is going to continue to fail, only faster and harder. It will be interesting to see what becomes of Australia.
This is getting super-long, but a quick justification of "China is gone": Look at a map. There are a dozen countries - including little Singapore - that can cut off China's oil imports from the Middle East any time they'd like. Wait six months and the population of China is cut in half. A rather drastic step for a tariff dispute, but an obvious step in a war.