Manufacturing Is a War Now
A military-industrial strategy for the U.S. and its allies to match China will need to involve three elements:
Tariffs and other trade barriers against China , in order to prevent sudden floods of Chinese exports from forcibly deindustrializing other countries.
Industrial policy , to maintain and extend manufacturing capacity in democratic nations.
Noah Smith • Manufacturing Is a War Now
China’s leaders know this very well, of course, which is why they are unleashing a massive and unprecedented amount of industrial policy spending — in the form of cheap bank loans, tax credits, and direct subsidies — to raise production in militarily useful manufacturing industries like autos, batteries, electronics, chemicals, ships, aircraft, dro
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So now I want you to imagine what happens if the U.S. and its allies get in a major war with China — as analysts say is increasingly possible. In the first few weeks, much the two countries’ stores of munitions — including drones and the batteries that power drones — will be used up. After that, as in Ukraine, it will come down to who can produce m
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America’s most economically important allies — Germany and Japan — are bearing the brunt of China’s most recent industrial assault. In the 2000s and 2010s, Germany’s manufacturing exports boomed, as they sold China high-tech machinery and components. China has now copied, stole, or reinvented much of Germany’s technology, and are now squeezing out
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First, he’s threatening broad tariffs on most or all Chinese goods, instead of tariffs targeted at specific, military useful goods. In a post two weeks ago, I explained why broad tariffs are of limited effectiveness:
Broad tariffs cause bigger exchange rate movements , which cancel out more of the effect of the tariffs. Putting tariffs on Chinese-ma
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