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Discussion Paper
An Update on the U.S.–China Phase One Trade Deal
A Liberty Street Economics post from last summer by Matthew Higgins and Thomas Klitgaard contained an assessment of the Phase One trade agreement between the United States and China. The authors of that note found that, depending on how successfully the deal was implemented, the impact on U.S. economic growth could have been substantially larger than originally foreseen by many of its critics, as a result of the fact that the pandemic had depressed the U.S. economy far below its potential growth path. Here we take another look at these considerations with the benefit of an additional year’s ...
Discussion Paper
What Happened to the U.S. Deficit with China during the U.S.-China Trade Conflict?
The United States’ trade deficit with China narrowed significantly following the imposition of additional tariffs on imports from China in multiple waves beginning in 2018—or at least it did based on U.S. trade data. Chinese data tell a much different story, with the bilateral deficit rising nearly to historical highs at the end of 2020. What’s going on here? We find that (as also discussed in a related note) much of the decline in the deficit recorded in U.S. data was driven by successful efforts to evade U.S. tariffs, with an estimated $10 billion loss in tariff revenues in 2020.
Briefing
When Are Tariffs Optimal?
Economic theory and historical evidence demonstrate that tariffs typically distort markets, lead to inefficient resource allocation, create deadweight losses and trigger harmful trade conflicts.While tariffs might improve a large country's terms of trade under strict theoretical conditions (market power, no retaliation), empirical evidence and real-world dynamics typically invalidate these assumptions.Repeated tariff impositions can escalate into trade wars, reducing economic welfare for all involved nations and emphasizing the importance of cooperative trade agreements.
Discussion Paper
U.S. Imports from China Have Fallen by Less Than U.S. Data Indicate
With new tariffs on China back in the headlines, this post seeks to offer some perspective on how much China’s exports have really been affected by multiple rounds of U.S. tariffs and export restrictions over the past seven years. The key takeaway is that U.S. imports from China have decreased by much less than has been reported in official U.S. statistics. As a result, the recent tariff increase on China could have a larger impact on the U.S. economy than is suggested by official U.S. data on the China import share, especially if favorable tariff treatment for direct-to-consumer imports is ...