Do Trade Deficits Matter
for the United States?
for the United States?
Economics Without The B.S.**:
[** Double entendre intended.]
[** Double entendre intended.]
The manner in which a
country conducts foreign trade is a reflection of its economy, its macro economy. While the United States has run very high
trade imbalances, about $500 billion each year or 3% of its real GDP, these
deficits were primarily due to the trade of goods, a $700 billion deficit, not
the trade of services which has consistently through the decades been in
surplus, currently at approximately $200 billion.
Our trade deficit
position took a change after the Asian Financial Crisis of 1997 and the entry
of China getting international trading status from the WTO (World Trade
Organization) in 2001. Since that time
Asian countries, and in particular China, have adopted an industrial policy of
being net trade exporting countries. And
the United States has willingly become the receptor of this international trade
imbalance in goods by being the deficit nation; and, allowing itself to expand
its consumption of goods beyond its productive capacity, which in the U.S. case
is financed by the huge inflows of foreign investment in our productive assets
at home as well as huge investments in our financial assets – U.S. treasuries, currency, agency bonds and
Wall Street created financial instruments (like CDOs, Collateralized Debt
Obligations) and their derivative products.
In addition to trade deficits that need to be financed, the United
States runs up huge Federal Government deficits of $400 to $600 billion each
year which also need to be financed.
This situation is a
reflection of the productive capacity – I would say a declining rate of
productivity – of the United States. The
1960s was the highest performing economy for a peacetime period in the entire
U.S. history – as measured by real GDP per capita, averaging approximately 3.5%
per year; over 5% per year on a real GDP basis.
Since that time we have been in a declining trendline in the rate of
productivity each succeeding decade – the 1980s and 1970s are worse than the
1960s, the 1990s are worse than the 1980s, and the last 17 years are worse than
the 1990s and
approximately one-third of the growth rate of the 1960s. While GDP is an imperfect measure of our
productivity, it is still the main measure we use. And while GDP is not a measure of our
standard of living, it is closely associated with it – the more you can
produce, the more you can consume.
We have had declining
productivity growth since the 1960s (the best period for peacetime productivity
growth in the 220+ years of history of the U.S. as measured by real GDP per
capita) and trade has been a drag on our productive growth because we now have
sectors within our economy which are less productive than what we had back in
the 1960s – a larger consumer/retail/wholesale sector, more service industries;
while having a smaller but highly productive industrial/commercial/agricultural
sectors and a small sector of highly productive business/info tech service
industries. With fewer high growth
opportunities to invest in the real economy, foreigners invest in financial
assets. Trade is not the only thing
dragging down the GDP rate of growth, nor is it the most important; but, it is
systematic of our productive base today.
When investment from
foreigners come back into the U.S. to finance our twin deficits of trade and
budget, it does make a difference how that investment is spent. Just as a business evaluates capital spending
to determine what the best investment return will be, so must the same be true
for dollars coming back into the U.S.
Even when they come back into U.S. treasuries they are financing our
government debt; so, that makes a difference if it is financing welfare or
consumption spending or defense spending on military technology or some other
capital improvement the government is making.
The foreigners investing in our government treasuries may be doing it
because they seek safety rather than the risk associated with capital
investments – that’s all well and good for them, but it is not the best outcome
for us even though it is a positive outcome for us. The better the return on the investment, the
better off we are; and, usually that will mean an investment in highly productive
resources rather than consumption spending.
In a world of limited
resources, how those resources are allocated (over time) matters. What individual actions acquire in a
transaction and how they use that acquisition affects others in that society
and determines the outcome for that society.
Our American predecessors took on an obligation, to themselves and their
society, to strive for the best and be in the vanguard of leadership in
accepting challenges. Each generation of
Americans that come along get to decide what path toward progress they will
take. The collective will of a people is
not just decided by independent individual choices but by the interaction with
others and the leadership (government, business, civic) in that society.
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