Hello my friends, today is January 4th and this is Markets Weekly. So this past week we had a bout of volatility in the markets but at the same time it was a shortened holiday trading week so I'm not sure if I'd read too much into it. So today let's talk about something a bit more thematic and a bit more appropriate to the upcoming trade war because that is coming. So I came across the work of Michael Botez who was a professor in China who specializes in global trade and China in particular. Now Michael has a very interesting perspective based on his recent writings that he thinks that tariffs would actually be good for the US whereas it would increase GDP in the US and also employment.
Now reading more into Patis' perspective and thanks to Andy Constin for tagging this extensive piece from Michael Botez, I came away with the impression that Michael shares the same perspective of the incoming Trump administration based on writings of incoming Trump officials. So I think it's helpful to understand this perspective in anticipation of what may be to come. So that's all we're going to talk about today. But before we begin let's level set a little bit. So if you were like me and you studied economics and school you would have come away with the conclusion that trade is good period the end. So once upon a time there was a very influential thinker by the name of David Ricardo.
And David Ricardo had this idea of comparative advantage whereas each country is relatively better at producing one thing than the other when compared to other countries and so when they trade with each other both countries are better off. Let's say Saudi Arabia for example big big country mostly desert but has a lot of oil. So if they were to grow corn you know it take a lot of water which they don't have a lot take a lot of resources and they probably wouldn't grow a lot. In contrast it'd be much easier for them to dig for oil compared to spending resources to grow corn.
Looking at another country for ants for example has a lot of good agricultural land it'd be easy for them to grow a lot of corn a lot of wheat and so forth. But as far as I know they don't have a lot of oil there so if they were to try to produce oil it'd take a lot of resources to try to find oil and they probably wouldn't produce all that much it'd be very very expensive to produce that. Now suppose these two countries traded with each other what you would end up seeing is Saudi Arabia specializing in producing oil and France specializing in producing agriculture goods and these two countries trading with each other such that at the end of the day Saudi Arabia would have more oil and more agricultural products than they would if they didn't trade with anyone and France would have more oil and more agricultural products than they would if they didn't trade with anyone.
So both countries would be better off. Now of course you would have some distributional consequences to this like if you were a farmer in Saudi Arabia or if you were an oil worker in France you guys would be out of work and you know have to find work elsewhere but the government could also you know tax and redistribute some of the profits in the winning industries to help compensate the losing industries but at the end of the day overall the countries would be better off. Now that's a theory and that's why you're taught that trade is better at the end and in practice you see a little bit of that in real life for example in the US when we trade we do have a lot of cheaper manufacturer goods the manufacturers did lose their jobs but they also received some benefits from the government of course and not very generous.
So kind of worked out that in real life but Michael looks at the data on a more global scale and realizes that there's something very important where it did not actually work as predicted. Now looking at this chart you can see that some countries like the US have chronic current account deficits and other countries like China have chronic current account surpluses and what that means is that the US is always buying more from abroad than it's selling from abroad and some countries like China are always selling more goods and services abroad than they are importing from abroad. Now that is kind of something that shouldn't happen because you would expect that over time these trades in balance and stood balance out.
Now in the time of David Ricardo they were under the gold standard right so you would expect let's say if we were under the gold standard that as the US ran these chronic current account deficits gold would flow out of the US and into China that would mean less gold less money in the US US prices would deflate more gold more money in China you would have an inflationary phenomenon so as goods in the US became cheaper and they became more expensive in China and then Chinese would buy more goods from the US and you would have that money would flow back from China into the US and these trade relationships would equilibrate. In a fiat system you would expect something similar with currencies where the R&B would appreciate things would become cheaper in R&B terms so it would be cheaper for Chinese companies to buy stuff from the US and again trade relations would equilibrate but obviously that's not what's happening here we have these chronic trade imbalances and so the system is not working as predicted and what you end up is a lot of people in the US who basically don't have jobs anymore like in a basic framework you would expect these people to go and migrate to industries where the US has a comparative advantage at let's say looking back into the Saudi Arabian oil case you would expect all the farmers there to go and become oil workers and again there's not that equilibrium. Now Michael is looking at this anything that it's a couple reasons for this one is that the US is a very desirable destination for capital so we have NVIDIA we have a very deep and liquid trade market and so forth so what ends up happening is that as foreigners are making a lot of money again selling goods to the US and ending up with a lot of dollars rather than using that to buy goods and services from the US to equilibrate the trade relationship what they're actually doing is buying a whole ton of financial assets in the US which again are highly desired.
在大卫·李嘉图的时代,人们使用金本位制。假设我们现在也在金本位下,美国长期出现经常账户赤字,黄金就会从美国流出,流入中国。这意味着美国的黄金和货币减少,价格下跌,而中国的黄金和货币增加,导致通胀现象。因此,美国的商品变得更便宜,中国的商品变得更贵,中国会购买更多美国商品,这样资金会从中国流回美国,贸易关系会达到平衡。
在法币体系下,你可以期待类似的货币走势,比如人民币升值,人民币计价的商品变得更便宜,中国企业更容易从美国购买商品,最终贸易关系会达到平衡。但是,显然现在情况并非如此,我们面临长期的贸易不平衡,系统没有按预期运作。结果就是美国有很多人失去了工作。在一个基础框架下,你会期望这些人转移到美国具有比较优势的行业,就像沙特阿拉伯的石油例子中,所有农民转行成为石油工人一样,但这种平衡没有出现。
Michael 认为有几个原因导致这种情况,其中一个原因是美国是资本的极具吸引力的目的地。美国有诸如 NVIDIA 这样的大公司,还有一个深度和流动性很高的交易市场。因此,外国人在向美国出售商品并赚取大量美元后,并未将其用于购买美国的商品和服务以平衡贸易关系,而是大量购买美国的金融资产,这些资产同样非常受欢迎。
Another reason he thinks that this is not equilibrating is due to the industrial policies of countries like China where the Chinese system is very different from the US where they kind of have a strong intervention to stand from their government. For example if their government wanted to build a successful EV industry which they have the government can pour a lot of subsidies into these sectors to make them very competitive much more so than the free market could produce. Now an example of this could be for example trying to peg your currency so that it is quantically undervalued so that your experts are cheaper it could be offering cheap loans to certain industries obviously in China the government controls the being sector so they could heavily subsidize one industry if they wanted to and they do do that it could be rewriting the regulations so that it's easier for companies to produce in China cheaper. For example one thing that we all know is that the environmental regulations there are lackster than they are in the US for example and so that is a cost advantage that manufacturers have over there. It could also be things like liberal laws which are not as strong there and oftentimes the government through a special system limits internal migration to some extent. So in China because industrial policy strongly favors manufacturing and in a sense subsidizes it by kind of keeping a lot of the public very poor the Chinese have a chronic persistent advantage when it comes to manufacturing that they are able to deploy throughout the world.
So if you have the government constantly subsidizing this then that's another reason why it wouldn't be a problem in the US because for chronic importing countries like the US because that means that even though Americans get cheaper household goods that is actually paid for by higher unemployment from the people who lost out the trade and because the trade relationship can't equilibrate these guys are basically stuck. So one of the other interesting things that Michael addresses is that some people think that this is a natural evolution of an economy as you become wealthier, you become more surfaces oriented and the goods things, the goods stuff you just can't compete with that it's an actual transition but Michael also points to countries like Germany and South Korea which and relatively wealthy countries but still have a very high share of manufacturing and of course if you have all these unlevel playing field due to government policy, government industrial policy it's very difficult for industries outside who don't have the same subsidies to compete.
如果政府一直在对其进行补贴,这就是美国不会出现问题的另一个原因。对于像美国这样的长期进口国家来说,这意味着尽管美国人能买到更便宜的家用商品,但这些实际上是由因贸易失利而失业的人来“支付”的。因为贸易关系无法平衡,这些人基本上就被困住了。Michael 提到的另一个有趣观点是,有人认为随着经济的发展,这是一种自然演变。当一个国家变得更加富裕时,它会更多地关注服务业,制造业等产品方面的竞争力就不够了,这是一个自然的过渡过程。但 Michael 也指出像德国和韩国这样相对富裕的国家,依然有很高比例的制造业。当然,由于政府的政策或工业政策,这样的不公平竞争环境,使没有获得相同补贴的国外产业很难竞争。
So this again becomes a very difficult problem. Now in this context is why Michael thinks that if we have tariffs it could actually be good for the US because if that is the problem that we have this chronic trade imbalance that can't balance due to the intervention of the government then we could also do things to try to even the playing field and that would be tariffs. Now if we were to do tariffs of course you would kind of be doing the same thing that these other countries are doing the US would intervene, it would be more government policy, import to become more expensive, enforce, actually will make US manufacturing more competitive and in a sense redirect resources towards manufacturing and maybe by forcing this we would have a more balanced trade relationship of course Chinese expert sectors would suffer but the US manufacturing sector would benefit at the end of the day you would have more growth in the US get over time because you would have more production manufacturing would increase in the US and you could also have more employment as more people work in manufacturing of course the US households would face higher prices and as we noted earlier Chinese companies would suffer that is one solution to this and a solution that the Trump administration has has been trying to pursue and will continue to pursue it's very clear. Another interesting idea that Michael floats is capital controls so again the Chinese companies Chinese foreign companies are making a lot of dollars but rather than using that to buy goods and services from the US they equilibrate the trade relationship they're buying a lot of US financial assets.
One way that we could stop them from doing this is to have capital controls and this could come in the form of very blunt things like just not letting foreigners buy US assets or it could become come through I guess software things like taxes let's say foreigners have to pay an additional capital gains tax or income tax for dividends and things like that so to discourage foreigners from buying US financial assets that could also force them to use their dollars and maybe spend more on goods and services. Now the downside the problem to that of course is that in the US that would tank the capital markets tank the equity markets many many rich people don't like to see them they're very influential and it would also be a problem for the corporate as well as the foreign policy establishment. The foreign policy establishment uses sanctions as a major soft power tool and you can do a lot of things with sanctions without having to break out the guns and the nukes and so forth and that's what they tried but the Russia. Now if we were to have more capital controls the dollar probably wouldn't be as influential as it is now that decreases the power of the foreign policy establishment and of course corporations and banks are heavily benefiting from these free flows of capital being able to do deals and shift money throughout the world that that would not be as easy in a capital controls framework and so they would lose as well so that's not something that I hear the Trump administration talking about but of course it's definitely a possibility down the line.
I have heard some slight whispers but very very not very prominent so I don't think that will happen. But this framework I think is the framework that's going to be adopted by the Trump administration when they come and they do their vision in transforming the US so I think tariffs are definitely going to happen and they're probably going to happen as a structural way something that's going to be used not just for negotiation which it will will be used for negotiation but I think structurally it's something that it's going to be persistent because they want to do this huge reshaping of the economic order and so I'm going to leave links to the pieces that I referenced below so definitely worth a read. I think there is some conceptual errors when it comes to the monetary aspect of this but you know that that's not a specialty but in any case that's why I prepared for today thanks so much for tuning in.