Wednesday, April 09, 2025

VAT, Tariff and industrial policy


Trump and his supporters have, as a matter of policy, rejected what was the Neoliberal consensus. Elections matter. See my video on this at
https://youtu.be/ELEjSnXOmpQ 

The question then arises on what tariff rates should be. If we wish to go country by country, the tariff should at least be equal to the exporter's value added tax rate that was zero rated at the border. Canada has a Goods and Services VAT at the Dominion and Provincial levels. The tariff needs to be that much.

If we want a general tariff, simply count up the benefit all countries extend when exporting to us by zero rating and divide it by total imports. Canada, China and Mexico would have biggest weighted impact.

Exempt form tariffs those products which we simply cannot make here at any time during the year. If we don't make something but could do so, then the tariff needs to be set high enough to make cost a wash - with the tariff funding subsidies to develop the industry - say growing cherry trees in California and Florida on a year round basis rather than importing them from Chile in the winter.

Tariffs (or a VAT replacing them - and exclusions can be used to do industrial policy as is suggested above - or could be policy free - should pay for health care subsidies that go beyond what employers could be incentivized to provide - say coverage of their retirees or long term care. Obamacare is crap - premiums and deductibles are too high for the working poor. Medicaid, Medicare and a cost-free public option to cover care for pre-existing conditions should all be VAT or tariff funded.

Domestic military (non-nuclear) basing should be tariff or VAT funded. If people want lower tariffs, they need to quit seeking defense facilities and contracts. This would be more useful if tariffs and VAT could be regionalized rather than uniform in all 50 states.

The portion of Social Security Old Age, Survivors and Disability premiums now paid by employers should be funded by tariffs or a value added tax and be credited to each eligible worker on an equal dollar basis (which removes an objection to personal retirement accounts).

A subtraction VAT should fund childcare and child tax credit subsidies so that employees need not file personal income taxes - with a VAT surtax collecting revenue in lieu of progressive rate structures for income from salaries, interest and dividends.

Capital gains taxes should be replaced by a separate value added tax at an internationally agreed upon rate (to prevent exchange arbitrage) and end the distinction between long and short term gains - as well as letting people hide profits by offsetting them with losses. That rewards failure and automatic trading scams that verge on insider trading.

Some of this has likely been heard before by policymakers. The question of using tariffs to account for the lack of a domestic VAT  should be discussed in the media. Ask members of the administration if this is part of the agenda. If not, it should be. This kind of policy should not be spit-balled. I suspect that part of the tariff calculus includes a VAT question. If not, it should.

And that is how to set tariff rates and what to spend them on.

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