Tariffs
are almost always a bad idea. Specifically, the tariffs Trump seeks
with China and visa versa will be bad for the vast majority of
people. The Chinese imposed tariffs will be bad for american farmers
as well as Chinese consumers.
The American farmers will sell less internationally and the Chinese
consumers have to pay more for their goods. Likewise, tariffs on
Chinese raw materials places a burden on American manufacturing and
hurts Chinese materials production.
There
are a few pluses to tariffs.
A very small group of people are actually helped by tariffs. For
example, coal miners or other natural resources sourced here in
America will experience increased prices due to less supply. But this
is a small group, and the widespread effects of price increases are
much larger in impact. Additionally, tariffs can be used to protect
some industries. This is commonly used as part of a national defense
argument. For example, if the US was totally dependent on foreign
food, the suppliers of food could have a lot of influence over the
US. But this example is really quite far from reality as the US is a
big exporter of food.
There
is a possible exception to my tariffs-equal-bad argument that
involves the idea of a Nash equilibrium. Simply, if China declares
tariffs on the US, how should the US react? Well, it all depends on
the weights of the different values …
You
may be familiar with the prisoner's dilemma, a situation where two
prisoners are faced with the option of either ratting out the other,
or not. There are 4 outcomes in this situation. The two prisoners
both don’t rat each other out, and they both get one year of jail
time. On the opposite side of the spectrum, both rat each other out
and get 2 years jail time. If one rats and other other doesn’t, the
cooperative prisoner gets out free and other other gets 3 years. See
the table below.
The
bottom right square in this situation is the Nash equilibrium, it is
the point where the game will go to give time. Why? Well look at the
numbers. Both prisoners getting one year sentences is the best
outcome for them overall, as 2 combined years is the shortest
sentence. But for an individual
player, getting zero years is better. So players will gravitate away
from the top left square to the top right or bottom left. Well,
anytime one player rats and other other doesn’t, the non-ratter
will regret their decision as two years as a ratter is better than 3.
Which then places the game in the bottom right box. At this point,
neither player is incentivized to make a different decision since
they cannot control the others actions. This point where there is no
incentive to change decisions is called the Nash equilibrium.
Now,
what does this all have to do with tariffs? Clearly, no tariffs
is the ideal outcome on the top left. Its best for other parties
overall. However, perhaps one party issuing tariffs is like one of
the prisoners deciding to rat. Once one country makes a tariff, the
other country is incentivized to respond with a tariff of its own,
leading to a downward spiral. Both countries are worse off in this
case. If trade is similar to the prisoners dilemma, maybe retaliatory
tariffs are just part of the game.
We
can look at strategies for playing the prisoner's dilemma and apply
them to tariffs. The best strategy is called tit of tat, and its
rules are quite simple. The player cooperates unless the other player
didn’t cooperate in the last round, in which case the player will
not cooperate. Here is an entire
video
discussing why this tactic is best.
So
in short, if the tariff situation is like the prisoner's dilemma,
a tariff in response to a tariff may be a fair strategy. However,
there was a big assumption in this argument that tariffs are similar
in weights to the prisoner's dilemma. It is possible that, in
reality, the US is better off cooperating with China regardless as to
what they do.
The
next time you go to Walmart and see everything from China is slightly
more expensive, you can think to yourself, is this all part of a big
strategy? Or is this all just a game of chicken that ended in a
collision? Just something to think about as you check out.