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  • What do you think of when you hear the wordwar?”

  • Is it this?

  • Or maybe this?

  • Well, there's a different type of war you may have heard a lot about recently.

  • Trade war worries igniting.

  • Is the trade war back on?

  • Trade war.

  • Trade war.

  • Full-blown trade war.

  • Theweaponsin a trade war are everywhere.

  • It's the food you eat.

  • The train you ride to work.

  • And the laptop you're probably watching this video on.

  • As a consumer you're probably consuming imports.

  • If we have a trade war and we start slapping tariffs on all of those imports, the bill

  • is going to be higher.

  • If the world relies so much on trade, what is a trade war and why do countries get caught

  • up in them in the first place?

  • Alright, global trade can be a dry topic so let's jazz this up a little bit.

  • To avoid any spoilers, let's say it's season one of Game of Thrones and both the

  • Tyrell and the Lannister kingdoms manufacturegoogly eyes.

  • The Tyrells then start to subsidize googly eye manufacturing in their kingdom.

  • That basically means that the Tyrells are paying at least part of the cost of manufacturing,

  • reducing the cost for buyers.

  • The Lannisters are understandably upsetwhy would anyone want to buy their more expensive

  • product?

  • They could try and negotiate with the Tyrells or they could choose to impose tariffs: taxes

  • on imports that raise the cost of those goods.

  • Which in this case, would punish the Tyrells.

  • With the tariffs in place, if the Tyrells tried to export goods to the Lannisters, they'd

  • have to pay an extra tax.

  • The Tyrells could then impose tariffs of their own.

  • Now if this disagreement goes back and forth and escalates with even more tariffs, that

  • would be considered a trade war.

  • But trade wars aren't fiction and there's more than one way they can start.

  • One possibility is you want to keep out countries import so that your domestic competitors

  • have an edge.

  • The second possibility is if there's a country that is doing something that you don't want them to,

  • you can use a tariff as a way of inflicting a degree of pain, of economic pain on that

  • country.

  • And you say until you change your evil ways I'm going to make it hurt.

  • Okay, so whowins” a trade war?

  • One way to think about whowins” a trade war is looking at which country has more targets

  • to choose from.

  • The more goods you ship to another country, the more vulnerable your goods are to punishing

  • tariffs.

  • So some economists would say that the country which ships fewer goods to the other has an

  • advantageand can outlast the other in a big clash.

  • Trade wars can also boost the fortunes of countries that stand outside the fray.

  • In the 1930s, the US enacted the Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act which put into place steep, sweeping

  • tariffs on imports as a way to protect American workers and industries.

  • Canada and some European countries put up tariffs of their own, launching a trade war.

  • Some of these countries then abandoned the US as a trading ally and took their trading

  • elsewhere.

  • Soviet Russia, a country not involved in the trade war, ended up gaining trading partners as

  • a result of Smoot-Hawley.

  • So sometimes countries not involved in a trade war can benefit from one.

  • But, as is the case with most wars,

  • trade wars are harmful for almost everyone involvedparticularly

  • for poorer consumers.

  • Rising prices in a trade war can have ripple effects.

  • When people have to spend more money on basics like clothing,

  • it means they have less money to spend on other goods and services.

  • And that can dampen the pace of the economy.

  • Traditionally when you've looked at trade protection, you often put higher protection on goods that are

  • consumed by poor people.

  • There are economists who have documented that systematically you tend to find higher tariffs

  • on things like low-end clothing, shoes, sugar, which play a disproportionate

  • role in the spending of people who are less was well off.

  • In April, President Trump unveiled a list of over 1000 Chinese exportsthings like

  • aircraft parts, TVs, and medical devicesthat he planned to place tariffs on, as a way to

  • to punish Beijing for restricting US investment in China and for stealing American intellectual

  • property.

  • The very next day, China struck back, unveiling its own list of US exports that it planned

  • to place tariffs on.

  • Since then, Trump has threatened another round of tariffs, with China ready to respond with

  • its own additional tariffs.

  • The whole situation is starting to look a lot like a trade war.

  • Countries disagree on fair and unfair trade practices all the time.

  • But there's something unique about Trump's approach to it: the unpredictability, the

  • wild threats, the disinterest in even pretending to play by the rules.

  • Trump isn't just destabilizing trade relations with China or any other country he threatens

  • he's destabilizing the entire global system of trade.

What do you think of when you hear the wordwar?”

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