So what you are saying is that making things here is a bad idea???
Yes. SOME things. As I said, get some books on the economics of trade. Or at least Google the Principle of Comparative Advantage.
It would be protectionism if we were blocking from Korea and Japan as well, but when we are dealing with a country that already has the US in an unfair position, all you are trying to do is save you "cheap stuff".
I don't think you understand the definition of protectionism. It is an act that is not defined by the number of partners you act against. And in this case you are dismissing protectionist actions against one of our largest trading partners as meaningless, which doesn't make sense.
We are in an unbalanced position, certainly, but is it an "unfair" one? How do you define that? Even none of what the Obama Administration has said alleges that the Chinese are dumping product, which would be an unfair trade practice as such things are defined. They just say that these imports are taking US jobs. That's a huge difference. Again, do some research on basic trade issues and understand what dumping is and the role of the WTO.
And the further implication that the extra point is to raise money to bulster his programs isn't exactly accurate, either. It's not like this is going to have much of an impact on the government funding. As far as I can tell, it's to do 2 things- to help the Union's support of the administration, and to bring to a point that some of China's trade policies are quite unfair, especially the artificially fixing of their currency to ours.
I wasn't trying to make that point.
If companies make just as good of stuff here in the US at a price that's competetive, that's good for our economy- more plants, more people making income, more tax, ripple effect on secondary buisnesses.
Sigh. Not necessarily. See above suggestion on understanding Comparative Advantage. Protecting industries tends to retard economic growth, not benefit it.
Let's not start pretending that we export any reasonable amount of stuff to China- those days are long gone. We send them our money, and they pirate it themselves. Probably not as good, but for their sake, I don't think they care.
In 2008 we exported about $72 billion worth of goods to China. In 1999 we exported about $13 billion worth of goods. What days are long gone, exactly? Now, by the same token, the trade imbalance has worsened greatly as we imported about $82 billion in 1999 and $338 billion in 2008. Regardless, I think those folks that are behind that $72 billion of exports might think it is pretty dang important, though you dismiss it as inconsequential.
How one tarriff increas on one product coming from one country turns into protectionism is pretty funny. Unless you just really, really like sending your money to China for more cheap stuff.
That one tariff increase on that one product was done for protectionist reasons and is therefore protectionism. I don't see the humor in that, but maybe I'm not as easily amused as you are.
Again, read your history. China's reaction is the logical next step in a trade war. You have to understand something about international trade, here, but in this day and age for one country to arbitrarily slap a tariff to blatantly protect an industry, without either a case for dumping or subsidized export, is firing the first shot in a trade war. Wars always begin with one shot.
Perhaps this will get defused before it escalates, and it is all just as amusing and inconsequential as you suggest. Let's hope so.