The Freer the Trade, the Better Things Get
Seton Motley, Contributing Author: The West Wing was for several years a fabulous television show – about a Democrat White House. Yes, I know, I’m a conservative and I wasn’t supposed to like it. But great writing is great writing, and Aaron Sorkin can seriously write. (He doesn’t bat 1.000, but here he was stellar.)For anyone who missed it - go watch the first three seasons. You’ll thoroughly enjoy it.
The show not only had great dialogue, it sometimes made outstanding political and policy points. Like when White House Communications Director Toby Ziegler (Richard Schiff) mocked anti-free trade college students, then delivered us the following:
Food is cheaper, clothes are cheaper, steel is cheaper, cars are cheaper, phone service is cheaper….
It lowers prices, it raises income….
Free trade stops wars. And that’s it. Free trade stops wars. And we figure out a way to fix the rest.
Talk of a free-trade deal, which would create a market of almost 2 billion people, seemed unthinkable just a year ago, when Brussels prepared to levy punitive import duties on billions of dollars of Chinese solar panels, setting off the biggest ever trade dispute between the two partners.
Here’s a contender for worst headline of the week:
That is a statistical average that would, however, have very different regional effects, Thiess Petersen of the Bertelsmann Foundation said. "The US and Europe would benefit greatly. But there would be drawbacks for the rest of the world.”
The second variant would thus make more sense: reducing not only tariffs but also so-called non-tariff barriers to trade.
Our terrible domestic Farm Law - chock full of protectionism - has been transmogrified by global market growth into terrible trade policy. As other farm-exporting nations have gone Big Protectionism in response to ours. The solution?
This is where the World Trade Organization, usually a colossal waste of space, can actually be of some good use….
The world’s crop-producing nations need to sit down together, each with a copy of everyone else’s lists of protectionist policies. And start horse trading.
“Brazil – how about if you get rid of this subsidy, we’ll each get rid of one.”
“Mexico – if you get rid of this tariff, we’ll each get rid of one.”
Let the subsequent discussions ensue. Lather, rinse, repeat.
So that when our perpetually heinous Farm Bill expires five years hence, we can write a far better one.
Or maybe we won’t need to write another one at all.
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Seton Motley is the President of Less Government and he contributes to ARRA News Service. Daily Caller also published this article. Please feel free to follow him him on Twitter Facebook.
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