Lemon Thrower wrote:68Camaro wrote:Tariffs have two useful related purposes: . . . .
Tarriffs have an additional purpose - to level the playing field.
... Another example would be a company in Canada or Europe that pay lower taxes than in the US because Canada or Europe underfunds their military and free rides on the U.S. Now, these are political arguments, and reasonable people may differ on where things stand. But what is inarguable is that tariffs can serve a third purpose - to balance inequities in trade or regulation.
68Camaro wrote:Tariffs aside, it was WW2 that created the economic engine of the US. Excepting the Americas, the world was largely destroyed,.
mtalbot_ca wrote:Lemon Thrower wrote:68Camaro wrote:Tariffs have two useful related purposes: . . . .
Tarriffs have an additional purpose - to level the playing field.
... Another example would be a company in Canada or Europe that pay lower taxes than in the US because Canada or Europe underfunds their military and free rides on the U.S. Now, these are political arguments, and reasonable people may differ on where things stand. But what is inarguable is that tariffs can serve a third purpose - to balance inequities in trade or regulation.
Being from Canada, I can see your point. Since Canada purchases most of its weapons from the US it makes sense to push for more spending, but the relationship I now better understand seems more complex that I initially thought. For exemple, there is like 160 US refineries that are solely equipped to process Alberta heavy crude. To re-equip the rafineries would cost time and money...This element alone explains the 200+billions trade deficits. Strangely, on consumer good Canada has a trade deficit with the US.
All that aside, I still believe that we (Canada) should spend more on defense/peace-related expenditures. I also believe that we should specialize in one area on another, as having a little bit of everything is not efficient. Environmental and regulatory concerns are valid and the level-playing field needs to be there. I believe that the US has relative issue with all the oil-fracking exploitation, but overall I thought that US-Canada partnership was so far so good.
Cheers.
68Camaro wrote:I predict a resolution, just not sure when. If you had the ability to sell now while the prices are high and buy back later after this is over, there might be money to be had, but you would have to have the right personal situation.
Trump as part of this is also purposely punishing the US headquartered automakers because they have offshored so much production. He wants it brought back into the US. A Fox Business host this morning was interviewed and listed off the top domestic manufactured models. Except for Tesla, the big three had no models in the top 10 or so. Then there was the Jeep Gladiator, then it was another list of foreigner based makers who are building in the US. Honda, Toyota, Volkswagen, BMW, Mercedes, etc. Most "US" cars aren't even built in the US anymore.
Not even pickup trucks.
mtalbot_ca wrote:For today, I saw little flags on the grocery shelving showing the country of origin (only for fruits and vegetables). Saw grapes from Chili which was unusual.
68Camaro wrote:...I suspect (despite that it might end up causing a conservative candidate to lose the next election) he is actually trying to stimulate pro-Canadian patriotism and nationalism, to cause your nation to come back to a position of greater self sufficiency, especially as regards ship building and arctic maritime patrols, and national defense. ...
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