Nearly every week I receive emails from readers asking me to explain my
stance against tariffs. The typical claim I hear is that we need tariffs to
preserve jobs.
I respond that tariffs don't protect jobs, they cost jobs. Take steel for
example.
Yes, tariffs will save a few hundred or a few thousand steel manufacturing
jobs.
But at what cost?
US car manufacturers have to pay more for steel as do US manufacturers of any
product that contains steel. And consumers have to pay more.
That's money consumers would otherwise spend elsewhere but cannot.
Get Me the Hell Out of Here
I recently spoke of manufacturing leaving Chicago. Indeed, six corporations
fled in July, and another business did so in August. I mentioned the
companies in my August 13 post Get Me the Hell Out of Here.
One of the companies that fled Illinois was Mondelez International, maker of
Oreo Cookies. Back in May, WGN noted Oreos Maker to Decide between Chicago, Mexico for New
Investment.
Chicago is competing with Mexico to land a plant that
makes Oreos and Chips Ahoy cookies.
Mondelez International Plans to invest $130 million to put up four new
manufacturing lines that would make Nabisco cookies and crackers.
The company is starting talks with its labor unions here in Chicago and says
it will base its decision on a variety of factors.
The company’s plant at 73rd and Kedzie has more than 1,000 union members.
Chicago Unions, Illinois Taxes, Sugar
Dealing with Chicago unions and Illinois taxes is bad enough. The decision to
leave Chicago was sound enough on that basis alone.
And poof ... 600 to 1,000 jobs will vanish.
There is another aspect of the deal that has not been discussed much: sugar
tariffs
How the Cookie Crumbles
Please consider How US Sugar Policies Just Helped America Lose 600 Jobs.
The manufacturer of Oreo cookies recently announced plans
to move production of Oreos from Chicago to Mexico, resulting in a loss of
600 U.S. jobs.
This should be a wake-up call to defenders of the U.S. sugar program and
other job-destroying trade barriers.
The leading ingredient in Oreos is sugar, and U.S. trade barriers currently
require Americans to pay twice the average world prices for sugar.
Sugar-using industries now have a big incentive to relocate from the United
States to countries where access to their primary ingredient is not
restricted.
If the government wants people making Oreo cookies and similar products to
keep their jobs, a logical starting point would be to eliminate the U.S.
sugar program, including barriers to imported sugar.
This obvious connection between the lost jobs and sugar quotas was missed by
many observers. According to one online comment: “This is why tariff[s] on
products coming to U.S must be raised.”
According to a 2006 report from the government’s International Trade
Administration: “Chicago, one of the largest U.S. cities for confectionery
manufacturing, has lost nearly one-third of its SCP manufacturing jobs over
the last 13 years. These losses are attributed, in part, to high U.S. sugar
prices.”
For example, The Bakery, Confectionery, Tobacco Workers and Grain Millers
Union consistently has opposed free trade agreements with sugar-producing
countries like Australia, Brazil, and Mexico—the kind of trade deals that
just might protect their members’ jobs.
Sweet Deals
As I have stated, tariffs costs jobs. Yet we hear asinine cries to
"raise tariffs" to protect jobs.
Such sweet deals preserve a few jobs (in this case of overly expensive sugar
production that is really far better suited to the tropic), at the huge
expense of any manufacturer in the US that needs sugar.
Net-net sugar tariffs have cost the US countless jobs.
And in the sweet deal Obama worked out in the Trans-Pacific Partnership
protects among other things sugar.
For details please
Mish's Proposed Free Trade Agreement
To call TPP a "free trade" agreement is ridiculous.
An excellent free trade agreement would consist of precisely one line of
text. I propose "All tariffs and all government subsidies on all
goods and services will be eliminated immediately."
Sugar vs. Sugar
Unlike oil, where there are differences between grades, sugar is pretty much
sugar. But there are two futures prices. Sugar #11 (the global price), and
sugar #16, the US price thanks to tariffs.
- Sugar #11: $10.44
- Sugar #16: $24.50
US sugar costs 135% more than other countries pay!
And economic fools, including unions, want more tariffs to "protect US
jobs".
Sugar, Sugar
As some might have expected, I have a musical tribute to this madness.
Link if video does not play: Sugar,
Sugar - Archies
Job Flight Out of Illinois
Finally, it's safe to say that inane policies cost Illinois those jobs. And
it's equally safe to say they fled Illinois to Mexico rather than to another
state because of inane tariffs.
High Fructose Corn Syrup
For icing in the cake, please note that sugar tariffs and corn support are
behind the use of high fructose corn syrup in US manufactured candy, cookies,
and crackers instead of sugar.
Still like them tariffs?
Mike "Mish" Shedlock