By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, April 02, 2025
I am writing this from the last days of our captivity.
Indeed, by the time some of you read this, we will be
free. If all goes according to the White House’s plan, April 2 will go down in
history as America’s “Liberation Day.”
Steve Bannon, a prominent unofficial Trump adviser, is so
confident about its success, he’s already talking about making Liberation Day a
federal
holiday next year.
But we’re getting ahead of ourselves. From what will we
be liberated on Liberation Day?
The Trump administration has been oddly parsimonious
about providing one of its patented pithy catchphrases for what we’re being
liberated from. You’d think they’d come up with something like “Globalist
Tyranny,” “Neoliberal Serfdom,” “Surplus Production
Sucker Status.”
But we can infer what they have in mind from context. On
March 21, President Trump posted on social media, “April 2nd is Liberation Day
in America!!! For DECADES we have been ripped off and abused by every nation in
the World, both friend and foe. Now it is finally time for the Good Ol’ USA to
get some of that MONEY, and RESPECT, BACK. GOD BLESS AMERICA!!!”
To this end, Trump intends to impose sweeping tariffs on
foreign cars and reciprocal tariffs on every single American trading partner.
The exact numbers and other details are murky. “No one
knows what the f— is going on,” Politico quoted a White House ally close
to Trump’s inner circle as saying over the weekend. “What are they going to
tariff? Who are they gonna tariff and at what rates? Like, the very basic
questions haven’t been answered yet.”
White House trade adviser Peter Navarro expects these
tariffs to raise $600
billion annually. Nearly every serious economist across the ideological
spectrum understands that American consumers would pay the bulk of that. Thus,
if “successful,” Trump would be imposing the largest, most regressive tax increase
in history.
It would be regressive because the taxes would hit the
poor and middle class much harder than the wealthy, because a larger share of
their income goes toward basics like gas, food, and clothes.
The challenge of writing about “Liberation Day” is that
it is so incandescently stupid it amounts to a conceptual piñata: You can whack
at it from any angle and get some reward for your effort.
For starters, many people understand that tariffs on,
say, foreign steel make foreign steel more expensive. As a result, the things
we make from foreign steel become more expensive, too. What gets overlooked,
however, is that taxing foreign steel also makes domestic steel
more
expensive. When you make something more scarce—steel, eggs, Taylor Swift
tickets—prices go up.
Politically, the idea of deliberately making things—like,
literally, all the things—more expensive, when you were elected in large part
due to popular exhaustion with inflation, is so irrational it’s like the
economic policy equivalent of a Dali
painting.
Geopolitically, blowing up our alliances and the global
economy in the name of “self-sufficiency” is unfathomably idiotic. The more a
country relies on tariffs to “protect” its economy, the poorer it
is. The more friendly trading partners a country has, the stronger it is.
The wellspring of this geyser of asininity is the simple
fact that Trump doesn’t understand how trade works.
The British economist Charles Goodhart coined “Goodhart’s
Law”: “When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.” For
Trump, the measure in question is balance of trade. He thinks trade deficits
are proof that America is being “ripped off.” That’s not how trade works.
Every time you get a haircut, you have a trade deficit
with the barber. Are you being ripped off?
Trump’s obsession with Canada illustrates his confusion.
We have a trade deficit with Canada, under a trade agreement he crafted in his
first term. Hence, Trump claims we “subsidize”
Canada $200 billion a year (a made-up number, but that’s beside the point). The
only reason we have a trade deficit with Canada is that they sell us oil at a
price below global market rates. If we stopped buying their cheaper oil, we’d
be worse off. Gas prices would go up and American jobs dedicated to refining
that oil and exporting it would vanish. But the metric Trump cares about would
improve.
Hold on a second. Stuff we need would become more scarce
and expensive. Americans would be worse off. And that’s a win because … why?
During the years of our supposed economic captivity, the
American economy became the “envy
of the world.” That’s what Trump seems bent on liberating us from.
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