Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Forget the economic illiteracy. What an arrogant and naive view of the global economic system!

From Free Exchange:

"Way to go, America
Posted by:
Economist.com | WASHINGTON
Categories:
Trade

I STILL can't get over this passage in John Judis' defence of the Buy America provisions in the stimulus plan:

Of course, countries are going to complain--and some already have--but it's likely that they recognize that the U.S. has to do something like this to ensure that its spending doesn't simply disappear in a flood of imports. If they still insist, then the U.S. can have a talk with these nations about how to end global trade imbalances that have been caused in good measure by Asian countries pursuing export-led growth. In that respect, the Buy American provision will have been a useful negotiating ploy--call it a stimulus of a different kind--even if the American steel industry remains stuck in the doldrums.

Forget the economic illiteracy. What an arrogant and naive view of the global economic system! And again, if someone had written something analogous about foreign policy, writers on the left (though, to be fair, perhaps not the writers at the belligerent New Republic) would be apoplectic—yes, America is violating international agreements to pursue short-sighted and potentially dangerous military activities abroad, and yes, our allies will complain, but look, we'll just sit them down and have a talk, and let them know that this is what America has to do to protect its "interests".

Anyway, our allies are indeed upset. Europe is looking to see what laws America has broken and whether it has the right to retaliate. And Japan, an ally, which is currently producing the worst macroeconomic numbers of any developed nation ever, has little choice but to beg America to reconsider. Those who believed that America the bully was finished when that helicopter left the Capitol for Andrews Air Force Base on January 20 must accept that they might have been wrong."

Me:

I hate to say this, but I think that he's right. The administration is sending a trial balloon/message that, in order for the Saver-Export Country / Spender Country Symbiosis to continue ( Which I believe that the Saver- Countries actually want ) , one part of the solution should be an increase in the exports of Spender Countries to Saver Countries. It's that, or limiting imports. Which do you prefer?

I'm not agreeing. I'm saying that Judis has a good read on what's going on.

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