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Protectionism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Protectionism is the economic policy of protecting a nation's manufacturing base from the effects of foreign competition by means of very high tariffs on imported goods, restrictive quotas, or other means of reducing importation. This contrasts with the free trade model, in which foreign products are exempted from tariffs, allowing foreign producers to access a domestic market without the tax burden incurred by domestic manufacturers.
Protectionism has frequently been associated with mercantilism, the belief that it is beneficial to maintain a positive trade balance; and import substitution.
Protectionism comes in two variants, depending on whether the tariff is intended to be collected (traditional protectionism) or not (modern protectionism).
Contents
[hide]
* 1 Modern Protectionism
* 2 Traditional Protectionism
* 3 Current World Trends
* 4 References
* 5 External links
[edit]
Modern Protectionism
Most modern views of protectionism call for placing tariffs at such a high level as to compel the consumer to buy the domestic product. With this version of protectionism, no tariff revenue is generated for the government, and the consumer is burdened both with high prices on the domestic product and no income or other domestic tax relief.
In the modern trade arena many other initiatives besides tariffs have been dubbed protectionism. For example some commentators, such as Jagadish Bagwatti, see developed countries' efforts in imposing their own labor or environmental standards as protectionism. Also, the imposition of restrictive certification procedures on imports are seen in this light.
Recent examples of protectionism are typically motivated by the desire to protect the livelihoods of politically important domestic industries, such as farmers in the United States and European Union, who in the absence of tariffs might be unable to compete with both lower-cost and untaxed foreign producers. Whereas formerly it was blue-collar jobs being lost to foreign competition, in recent years there has been a renewed discussion of protectionism due to offshore outsourcing and the loss of white-collar jobs. Most economists view this form of protectionism as a disguised transfer payment from consumers (who pay higher prices for food or other protected goods) to local high-cost producers.
[edit]
Traditional Protectionism
In its historic sense, Protectionism is the economic policy of relying on revenue tariffs for government funding in order to reduce or eliminate taxation on domestic industries and labor (e.g., corporate and personal income taxes.) In protectionist theory, emphasis is placed on reducing taxation on domestic labor and savings at a cost of higher tariffs on foreign products. This contrasts from the free trade model, in which first emphasis is placed on exempting foreign products from taxation, with the lost revenue to be compensated domestically.
Traditional protectionism sees revenue tariffs as a source of government funding, much like a sales tax, that can be used to reduce other domestic forms of taxes. The goal of traditional protectionism is to maximize tax revenue from the purchase of foreign products with the goal of being able to reduce or eliminate other forms of domestic taxation (income taxes, sales taxes, etc.) as a result. (Tariffs were the predominant source of tax revenue in the United States from its founding through World War II, allowing the country to operate through most of that period without income and sales taxes.) Traditional protectionism remains highly dependent on large amounts of imports and for tariffs to be kept at reasonable rates to ensure maximum government revenue.
Famous early protectionists in the United States included Alexander Hamilton (who set the country's financing on the tariff), Abraham Lincoln, and Theodore Roosevelt.
One of the leading champions of traditional protectionism in the United States today is Pat Buchanan. As he wrote in his 2004 book "Where the Right Went Wrong", "Tariffs raise the prices of goods. True. But all taxes--tariffs, income taxes, sales taxes, property taxes--are factored into the final price of the goods we buy. When a nation puts a tariff on foreign goods coming into the country, it is able to cut taxes on goods produced inside the country. This is the way to give U.S. manufacturers and workers a 'home-field advantage.'"
Traditional
protectionists fault the
free trade
model as being reverse
protectionism in disguise, that of u
sing tax policy to
protect fo
reign manufacturers from domestic
competition. By ruling
out revenue tariffs on fo
reign products,
government must fully rely on domestic
taxation to provide its revenue, which falls heavily dis
proportionately on domestic manufacturing. Quote Paul Craig Roberts: "
[Foreign discrimination of US products] is re
inforced by the
US tax system, which imposes no appreciable
tax burden on fo
reign goods and
services
sold in the
US but imposes a heavy
tax burden on
US producers of
goods and
services re
gardless of whether they are
sold within the
US or ex
ported to other countries."*
[1]
While
traditional
protectionists
differ from
modern
protectionists in that they are very much pro-im
port (based on their belief that a country should rely on imports as much as possible to pay the taxes), they nonetheless dis
agree with
free traders in that they believe the primary focus should be on exempting domestic manufacturing, rather than fo
reign, from the various forms of
taxation.
[edit]
Current World Trends
It is the
stated
policy of most First World countries to eliminate
protectionism through
free trade
policies en
forced by
international treaties and
organizations such as the World
Trade
Organization. Despite this, many of these countries still
place
protective and/or revenue tariffs on fo
reign products to
protect some favored or
politically influential in
dustries, or to
reduce the
taxation
demands on their
internal domestic manufacturing,
making their
products more
competitive. The elimination of these tariffs remains a contentious
political and diplomatic
issue.
China and Japan have been accused of
protectionist
policies that peg their
currencies to the
dollar and, thus, set
prices of their ex
ports lower than they would be if the
market de
termined the relative
prices of each
currency.
This
article does not cite its references or
sources. You can
help Wikipedia by including ap
propriate citations.
Protectionist quotas can cause fo
reign producers to become more
profitable, mitigating their desired
effect. This happens because quotas
artificially restrict supply, so it is unable to meet
demand; as a result the fo
reign producer can
command a premium
price for its
products. These increased
profits are known as quota
rents.
For example, in the
United
States
(1981-1994), Japanese automobile
companies were held to voluntary ex
port quotas. These quotas limited the supply of Japanese automobiles desired by
consumers in the
United
States
(1.68 million, raised to 1.85 million in 1984, and raised again to 2.30 million in 1985), increa
sing the
profit margin on each automobile more than
enough (14% or about $1200 in 1983 dollars, about $2300 in 2005 dollars) to
cover the
reduction in the number of automobiles that they
sold, leading to greater overall
profits for Japanese automobile manufacturers in the
United
States ex
port market.dd
[edit]
References
This
article does not cite its references or
sources. You can
help Wikipedia by including ap
propriate citations.
[edit]
External links
* VOLUNTARY EX
PORT RESTRAINTS ON AUTOMOBILES
http://www.perc.org/publications/percreports/sept1999/tangents.php
* American
Economic Alert
http://www.americaneconomicalert.org
* Economy In Crisis
http://www.economyincrisis.org/
* Paul Craig Roberts' critique of
free trade
http://www.vdare.com/roberts/050904_marx.htm
* Pat Buchanan
commentary on
protectionism
http://www.theamericancause.org/a-pjb-050418-freetrade.htm
* Warren Buffet'
s proposal for
use of Im
port Certificates
(IC's) as an alternative to revenue tariffs
http://www.berkshirehathaway.com/letters/growing.pdf
* Phyllis Sc
hlafly'
s 1996 review of
free trade and
protectionism within the
United
States
http://www.eagleforum.org/psr/1996/mar96/psrmar96.html
* Protectionism and the Destruction of Prosperity By Murray N.
Rothbard - A critical view of
protectionism
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