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Tracking the tariffs

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27 September 2018, 04:00 PM
Piano*Dad
Tracking the tariffs
quote:
Someone please explain to me why US steel mfgr's raised their prices as a result of the tariffs, which is how I read the above statement.


That's what the tariffs allow them to do in any reasonably competitive market. Tariffs are like a wall around the country. The height of the tariff is the height of the wall. The tariff permits domestic prices to rise to the height of the wall. If you have free trade, domestic and world prices are the same (except for transport costs). If you have a 10% tariff, domestic prices are 10% higher than world prices. No US manufacturer has an incentive to sell for less than that, because they don't have to.
27 September 2018, 04:01 PM
wtg
I knew P*D would have a more lucid explanation... Big Grin


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



27 September 2018, 04:50 PM
piqaboo
That's what I figured.
So US Steel hypothetically increase employment & demonstrably raise prices, leading to users of steel to spend more so either reduce profits or raise prices, or reduce expenses possibly by reducing jobs, and the consumer learns to buy less often, which further damages profits which leads to loss of companies...
and a new equilibrium develops.

but who actually comes out better off? What am I missing?

because I'll bet the majority of the new capacity comes from spiffy new automation not more employed steel workers.


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27 September 2018, 07:10 PM
Piano*Dad
If you owned stock in a steel manufacturer, you win. If you are a high-skilled (or union-protected) worker in that industry, you win. If you owned stock in a steel user, you lose. If you are a worker in one of those industries, you lose. The losers don't feel the loss as much because steel is a big fraction of a steel company's output, but a small fraction of an automaker's output. And the losers don't always fully understand that they are losers. It's often not easy to connect the dots between something abstract, an increase in tariffs on steel, and something far downstream like a pink slip at a retailer of paper clips.
02 November 2018, 03:04 PM
wtg
Trade deficit with China widens for the fourth consecutive month.

quote:
The U.S. trade deficit rose to a seven-month high in September as imports surged to a record high amid strong domestic demand, offsetting a rebound in exports.

The Commerce Department said on Friday the trade gap increased 1.3 percent to $54.0 billion, widening for a fourth straight month. Data for August was revised to show the trade deficit rising to $53.3 billion instead of the previously reported $53.2 billion.

The trade deficit continues to deteriorate despite the Trump administration’s protectionist trade policy, which has left the United States locked in a bitter trade war with China as well as tit-for-tat tariffs with other trade partners, including the European Union, Canada and Mexico.

The politically sensitive goods trade deficit with China jumped 4.3 percent to a record high of $40.2 billion in September. Economists polled by Reuters had forecast the overall trade deficit rising to $53.6 billion in September.

When adjusted for inflation, the goods trade gap increased to an all-time high of $87.0 billion in September from $86.3 billion in August.

The government reported last week that the trade deficit subtracted 1.78 percentage points from gross domestic product in the third quarter. That was the most since the second quarter of 1985 and reversed the 1.22 percentage points contribution in the April-June period.


https://www.reuters.com/articl...d-high-idUSKCN1N71DL


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



22 November 2018, 07:08 PM
wtg
quote:
President Donald Trump's trade war is already wiping out small American manufacturing businesses, and it will have a more negative impact on the US economy than most are expecting, economists at the Swiss banking giant UBS say.

Seth Carpenter, UBS' top US-focused economist, expects tariffs imposed by Trump on Chinese goods and China's retaliatory levies to halve the speed of gross-domestic-product growth in the world's largest economy.

"We are outliers compared to the rest of Wall Street in terms of how big an effect the tariffs have on the US economy," he said in London on Thursday at the launch of the bank's 2019 Global Economic Outlook. "We expect a material slowing in the fourth quarter of this year — so right now — into the first quarter of next year."

He pointed to official UBS forecasts, which see annualized growth at 1.7% in the fourth quarter and just 1.5% in the first quarter of 2019. The annualized growth rate in the third quarter, as reported by the US Bureau of Economic Analysis, was 3.5% — which already represented a slowing from the previous quarter and showed a significant negative impact from the trade war.

Most of the slowdown, UBS says, is likely to come in the manufacturing sector, which is much more sensitive to changing prices for raw materials. The impact is likely to be so acute that many new manufacturers are likely to go out of business.

Yet much of Trump's reasoning behind the trade war is to reinvigorate the US manufacturing sector.


https://www.businessinsider.co...people-think-2018-11


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



23 November 2018, 01:22 AM
Steve Miller
All this wining is wearing me out.


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Life is short. Play with your dog.

23 November 2018, 05:39 AM
Daniel
Ivanka received Chinese patents for voting machines and nursing homes. Am I the only one who finds this ghoulish?
23 November 2018, 08:52 AM
wtg
quote:
Originally posted by Steve Miller:
All this wining is wearing me out.


More on its way.

https://www.businessinsider.co...na-trade-war-2018-11


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We are all visitors to this time, this place. We are just passing through. Our purpose here is to observe, to learn, to grow, to love… and then we return home. - Australian Aboriginal proverb

Bazootiehead-in-training



23 November 2018, 09:42 AM
QuirtEvans
quote:
Originally posted by Steve Miller:
All this wining is wearing me out.


I'm not sure whether you left out an n or an h.
23 November 2018, 10:01 AM
Piano*Dad
...wining is what you do when you're tired of all this winning but don't feel like whining.
23 November 2018, 11:08 AM
Steve Miller
n Smiler


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Life is short. Play with your dog.

25 November 2018, 10:42 AM
Axtremus
New York Times article:
https://nyti.ms/2zxFtf1

It talks about how Columbia Sportswear navigates around tariffs, how designers are paired with international trade experts to design around tariffs.


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02 December 2018, 09:06 AM
Axtremus
US-China trade war: Deal agreed to suspend new trade tariffs
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/worl...tin-america-46413196

90 days of no escalation on tariffs.


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www.PianoRecital.org -- my piano recordings -- China Tune album

02 December 2018, 12:40 PM
jon-nyc


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If you think looting is bad wait until I tell you about civil forfeiture.